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The impact of the metabotropic glutamate receptor and other gene family interaction networks on autism.

Authors :
Hadley, Dexter
Hadley, Dexter
Wu, Zhi-Liang
Kao, Charlly
Kini, Akshata
Mohamed-Hadley, Alisha
Thomas, Kelly
Vazquez, Lyam
Qiu, Haijun
Mentch, Frank
Pellegrino, Renata
Kim, Cecilia
Connolly, John
AGP Consortium
Glessner, Joseph
Hakonarson, Hakon
Hadley, Dexter
Hadley, Dexter
Wu, Zhi-Liang
Kao, Charlly
Kini, Akshata
Mohamed-Hadley, Alisha
Thomas, Kelly
Vazquez, Lyam
Qiu, Haijun
Mentch, Frank
Pellegrino, Renata
Kim, Cecilia
Connolly, John
AGP Consortium
Glessner, Joseph
Hakonarson, Hakon
Source :
Nature communications; vol 5, iss 1, 4074; 2041-1723
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Although multiple reports show that defective genetic networks underlie the aetiology of autism, few have translated into pharmacotherapeutic opportunities. Since drugs compete with endogenous small molecules for protein binding, many successful drugs target large gene families with multiple drug binding sites. Here we search for defective gene family interaction networks (GFINs) in 6,742 patients with the ASDs relative to 12,544 neurologically normal controls, to find potentially druggable genetic targets. We find significant enrichment of structural defects (P ≤ 2.40E-09, 1.8-fold enrichment) in the metabotropic glutamate receptor (GRM) GFIN, previously observed to impact attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and schizophrenia. Also, the MXD-MYC-MAX network of genes, previously implicated in cancer, is significantly enriched (P ≤ 3.83E-23, 2.5-fold enrichment), as is the calmodulin 1 (CALM1) gene interaction network (P ≤ 4.16E-04, 14.4-fold enrichment), which regulates voltage-independent calcium-activated action potentials at the neuronal synapse. We find that multiple defective gene family interactions underlie autism, presenting new translational opportunities to explore for therapeutic interventions.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature communications; vol 5, iss 1, 4074; 2041-1723
Notes :
application/pdf, Nature communications vol 5, iss 1, 4074 2041-1723
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287370754
Document Type :
Electronic Resource