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Protein interaction network of alternatively spliced isoforms from brain links genetic risk factors for autism

Authors :
Shuli Kang
Michael A. Calderwood
Kourosh Salehi-Ashtiani
Vladimir Vacic
Song Yi
Marc Vidal
Steve Horvath
Maria J. Rodriguez
Yun Shen
Shelly A. Trigg
Guan Ning Lin
David E. Hill
Xingyan Kuang
Dmitry Korkin
Martin P. Broly
Murat Tasan
Stanley Tam
Irma Lemmens
Lila Ghamsari
Xinping Yang
Jacob J. Michaelson
Jan Tavernier
Nan Zhao
Roser Corominas
Lilia M. Iakoucheva
Frederick P. Roth
Jonathan Sebat
Changyu Fan
Dheeraj Malhotra
Tong Hao
Source :
Nature Communications, NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2014.

Abstract

Increased risk for autism spectrum disorders (ASD) is attributed to hundreds of genetic loci. The convergence of ASD variants have been investigated using various approaches, including protein interactions extracted from the published literature. However, these datasets are frequently incomplete, carry biases and are limited to interactions of a single splicing isoform, which may not be expressed in the disease-relevant tissue. Here we introduce a new interactome mapping approach by experimentally identifying interactions between brain-expressed alternatively spliced variants of ASD risk factors. The Autism Spliceform Interaction Network reveals that almost half of the detected interactions and about 30% of the newly identified interacting partners represent contribution from splicing variants, emphasizing the importance of isoform networks. Isoform interactions greatly contribute to establishing direct physical connections between proteins from the de novo autism CNVs. Our findings demonstrate the critical role of spliceform networks for translating genetic knowledge into a better understanding of human diseases.<br />Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a complex genetic trait that encompasses a range of neurodevelopmental disorders. Here, the authors clone brain-expressed alternatively-spliced isoforms of ASD risk factors and construct a network of protein interactions that provides further insight into the disease aetiology.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications, NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0967afe8ec1821b99f086c447af21f4