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Genomic architecture of Autism Spectrum Disorder from comprehensive whole-genome sequence annotation

Authors :
Brett Trost
Bhooma Thiruvahindrapuram
Ada J.S. Chan
Worrawat Engchuan
Edward J. Higginbotham
Jennifer L. Howe
Livia O. Loureiro
Miriam S. Reuter
Delnaz Roshandel
Joe Whitney
Mehdi Zarrei
Matthew Bookman
Cherith Somerville
Rulan Shaath
Mona Abdi
Elbay Aliyev
Rohan V. Patel
Thomas Nalpathamkalam
Giovanna Pellecchia
Omar Hamdan
Gaganjot Kaur
Zhuozhi Wang
Jeffrey R. MacDonald
John Wei
Wilson W.L. Sung
Sylvia Lamoureux
Ny Hoang
Thanuja Selvanayagam
Nicole Deflaux
Melissa Geng
Siavash Ghaffari
John Bates
Edwin J. Young
Qiliang Ding
Carole Shum
Lia D’abate
Clarissa A. Bradley
Annabel Rutherford
Vernie Aguda
Beverly Apresto
Nan Chen
Sachin Desai
Xiaoyan Du
Matthew L.Y. Fong
Sanjeev Pullenayegum
Kozue Samler
Ting Wang
Karen Ho
Tara Paton
Sergio L. Pereira
Jo-Anne Herbrick
Richard F. Wintle
Jonathan Fuerth
Juti Noppornpitak
Heather Ward
Patrick Magee
Ayman Al Baz
Usanthan Kajendirarajah
Sharvari Kapadia
Jim Vlasblom
Monica Valluri
Joseph Green
Vicki Seifer
Morgan Quirbach
Olivia Rennie
Elizabeth Kelley
Nina Masjedi
Catherine Lord
Michael J. Szego
Ma’n H. Zawati
Michael Lang
Lisa J. Strug
Christian R. Marshall
Gregory Costain
Kristina Calli
Alana Iaboni
Afiqah Yusuf
Patricia Ambrozewicz
Louise Gallagher
David G. Amaral
Jessica Brian
Mayada Elsabbagh
Stelios Georgiades
Daniel S. Messinger
Sally Ozonoff
Jonathan Sebat
Calvin Sjaarda
Isabel M. Smith
Peter Szatmari
Lonnie Zwaigenbaum
Azadeh Kushki
Thomas W. Frazier
Jacob A.S. Vorstman
Khalid A. Fakhro
Bridget A. Fernandez
M.E. Suzanne Lewis
Rosanna Weksberg
Marc Fiume
Ryan K.C. Yuen
Evdokia Anagnostou
Neal Sondheimer
David Glazer
Dean M. Hartley
Stephen W. Scherer
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Fully understanding the genetic factors involved in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) requires whole-genome sequencing (WGS), which theoretically allows the detection of all types of genetic variants. With the aim of generating an unprecedented resource for resolving the genomic architecture underlying ASD, we analyzed genome sequences and phenotypic data from 5,100 individuals with ASD and 6,212 additional parents and siblings (total n=11,312) in the Autism Speaks MSSNG Project, as well as additional individuals from other WGS cohorts. WGS data and autism phenotyping were based on high-quality short-read sequencing (>30x coverage) and clinically accepted diagnostic measures for ASD, respectively. For initial discovery of ASD-associated genes, we used exonic sequence-level variants from MSSNG as well as whole-exome sequencing-based ASD data from SPARK and the Autism Sequencing Consortium (>18,000 trios plus additional cases and controls), identifying 135 ASD-associated protein-coding genes with false discovery rate SCN2A and a nuclear mitochondrial insertion impacting SYNGAP1. Polygenic risk scores did not differ between children with ASD in multiplex families versus simplex, and rare, damaging recessive events were significantly depleted in multiplex families, collectively suggesting that rare, dominant variation plays a predominant role in multiplex ASD. Our study provides a guidebook for exploring genotype-phenotype correlations in the 15-20% of ASD families who carry ASD-associated rare variants, as well as an entry point to the larger and more diverse studies that will be required to dissect the etiology in the >80% of the ASD population that remains idiopathic. All data resulting from this study are available to the medical genomics research community in an open but protected manner.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b717e0844196ee000bbf7582208abb19
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.05.05.22274031