Schmilovich, Zoe, Huguet, Guillaume, He, Qin, Musa-Johnson, Amélie, Douard, Elise, Loum, Mor Absa, Liao, Calwing, Ross, Jay P., Dionne-Laporte, Alexandre, Spiegelman, Dan, Jean-Louis, Martineau, Saci, Zohra, Hayward, Caroline, Banaschewski, Tobias, Bokde, Arun, Desrivieres, Sylvane, Lemaitre, Herve, Schumann, Gunter, Xiong, Lan, and Dion, Patrick A.
Contactin-5 (CNTN5) is a candidate risk gene for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Previous attempts to associate CNTN5 CNVs with ASD-susceptibility were limited by insufficient statistical power. Here, we aim to clarify the putative association between CNTN5 CNVs and ASD-risk using large-scale case-control analyses. A CNTN5 CNV, shared by four brothers in a multiplex family with ASD, was initially identified. We calculated the prevalence and transmission of CNTN5 CNVs in cases across five ASD cohorts (n=15,784). Second, we compared the prevalence of CNTN5 CNVs in cases to their unaffected siblings (n=4,996). Third, we assessed the enrichment of CNTN5 CNVs in cases to extrafamilial controls across three cohorts (n=24,886) and the UK Biobank (n = 459,862). Finally, we evaluated the clinical impact of CNTN5 CNVs in a broad neurodevelopmental disorder cohort and the DECIPHER database. Most (96.7%) CNTN5 CNV deletions (0.193%) and duplications (0.03%) in cases were inherited by a parent that transmitted the variant to their affected and unaffected children at the same rate. We identified a significant enrichment of intronic CNTN5 CNV deletions in cases compared to extrafamilial controls (0.178% versus 0.019%; p-value=1.68E-05; OR:8.51; 95%CI=[2.58-44.21]). There was no difference in CNTN5 CNV enrichment between cases and individuals with NDDs. Intronic CNTN5 CNV deletions are rare, inherited, and intermediate effect size ASD-susceptibility variants that may also confer risk for other neuropsychiatric disorders. We offer a framework to characterize candidate variants that may not be detected through small-scale approaches to implicate intermediate effect size variants in the etiology of ASD. • CNVs encompassing the CNTN5 gene may increase the risk for ASD and broad neurodevelopmental disorders. • CNTN5 CNVs are rare and parents transmit the variant to their children with ASD and unaffected children at the same rate. • Framework to assess the role of rare and intermediate effect-size candidate variants in complex disorders [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]