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Defects of myelination are common pathophysiology in syndromic and idiopathic autism spectrum disorder

Authors :
Andrew E. Jaffe
Joseph F. Bohlen
Courtney Thaxton
BaDoi N. Phan
Brady J. Maher
Morganne N. Campbell
Andrew J. Kennedy
J. David Sweatt
Stephanie Cerceo Page
Emily E. Burke
Jeremy M. Simon
Benjamin D. Philpot
Joo Heon Shin
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects approximately 1:68 individuals and has incalculable burdens on affected individuals, their families, and health care systems. While the genetic contributions to idiopathic ASD are heterogeneous and largely unknown, the causal mutations for syndromic forms of ASD - including truncations and copy number variants - provide a genetic toehold with which to gain mechanistic insights1-3. Models of these syndromic disorders have been used to better characterize the molecular and physiological processes disrupted by these mutations4. Two fundamental questions remain - how biologically similar are the mouse models of syndromic forms of ASD, and how relevant are these mouse models to their human analogs? To address these questions, we performed integrative transcriptomic analyses of seven independent mouse models of three syndromic forms of ASD generated across five laboratories, and assessed dysregulated genes and their pathways in human postmortem brain from patients with ASD and unaffected controls. These cross-species analyses converged on shared disruptions in myelination and axon development across both syndromic and idiopathic ASD, highlighting both the face validity of mouse models for these disorders and identifying novel convergent molecular phenotypes amendable to rescue with therapeutics.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1bd5c6bf8f6d5ad2ed849374da4817e1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/128124