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Whole-Exome Sequencing Identifies Three Candidate Homozygous Variants in a Consanguineous Iranian Family with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Skeletal Problems

Authors :
Farkhondeh Behjati
Saeed Farajzadeh Valilou
Susan Banihashemi
Seyed Gholamreza Noorazar
Fatemeh Hadipour
Mahshid Fattahi
Ahoura Nozari
Mahdiyeh Pashaei
Zahra Hadipour
Javad Karimian
Bijan Maghsoodlou Estrabadi
Afagh Alavi
Yousef Shafeghati
Saghar Ghasemi Firouzabadi
Source :
Mol Syndromol
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2020.

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by 3 core symptoms with impaired social communication, repetitive behavior, and/or restricted interests in early childhood. As a complex neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD), the phenotype and severity of autism are extremely heterogeneous. Genetic factors have a key role in the etiology of autism. In this study, we investigated an Azeri Turkish family with 2 ASD-affected individuals to identify probable ASD-causing variants. First, the affected individuals were karyotyped in order to exclude chromosomal abnormalities. Then, whole-exome sequencing was carried out in one affected sibling followed by cosegregation analysis for the candidate variants in the family. In addition, SNP genotyping was carried out in the patients to identify possible homozygosity regions. Both proband and sibling had a normal karyotype. We detected 3 possible causative variants in this family: c.5443G>A; p.Gly1815Ser, c.1027C>T; p.Arg343Trp, and c.382A>G; p.Lys128Glu, which are in the FBN1, TF, and PLOD2 genes, respectively. All of the variants cosegregated in the family, and SNP genotyping revealed that these 3 variants are located in the homozygosity regions. This family serves as an example of a multimodal polygenic risk for a complex developmental disorder. Of these 3 genes, confluence of the variants in FBN1 and PLOD2 may contribute to the autistic features of the patient in addition to skeletal problems. Our study highlights the genetic complexity and heterogeneity of NDDs such as autism. In other words, in some patients with ASD, multiple rare variants in different loci rather than a monogenic state may contribute to the development of phenotypes.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol Syndromol
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07c88b449068077a39d12106939506b7