New Study Casts Sharpest Light Yet on Genetic Mysteries of Autism

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Our picture of how genetic errors contribute to autism has just gotten sharper.

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Cold Spring Harbor, NY - October 30, 2014 - Our picture of how genetic errors contribute to autism has just gotten sharper. The latest series of clarifications in what, in its totality, is a very complex puzzle, emerges from new research published in Nature today by a team co-led by investigators at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL), Yale University, the University of California, San Francisco, and the University of Washington, Seattle.   

Most important among the new findings are greatly refined estimates of the total contribution to autism spectrum disorder (ASD) attributable to a particular kind of genetic mutation called de novo mutation.  These are mutations that arise “spontaneously” in a child and do not occur in either parent. At least 30% of all ASD is caused by de novo mutations, according to CSHL Assistant Professor Ivan Iossifov, a quantitative biologist and first author of the paper presenting the new research.

This 30% is a conservative estimate -- and consists of three subtypes of de novo mutations that are major contributors. One kind is called “missense” mutations.  Another is called “likely gene-disrupting” mutations (abbreviated as LGD).  Both subtypes are small in size – “misspellings” involving 20 DNA letters or less.  Missense mutations (which lead to errors in proteins that affect their function), are more common but individually less harmful; LGD mutations are rarer, but are often devastating.  A third contributing type is large-scale copy number variations, which the team described in earlier work. All these mutations hit the coding part of genes, but there are other types of de novo mutations that the team cannot yet detect using current technology, which is why 30% is a conservative estimate.

One of the team’s findings is that missense de novo mutations cause a total of 12% of all autism, while LGD de novo mutations cause 9%.  Together, then, they account for some 21% of autism.  However, not every mutation carries the same weight: about 13% of missense de novo mutations, or 1 in 7, were thought to cause ASD in the group under study.  In contrast, 43% of the less frequent LGD mutations were deemed causal.   

A second major finding of the new study, which analyzes the genomes of over 2,500 “simplex” families – those in which a single child but neither parent nor siblings, if any, have ASD – is that the pool of spontaneously mutated genes contributing to ASD across the population totals about 400. Humans have roughly 21,000 genes. The key question, of course, is which genes confer the highest risk of ASD when mutated.

The new study was able to demonstrate something not shown previously: that ASD caused by de novo mutations generally divides into two different risk classes. In one class are comparatively high-IQ males (who are also the highest-functioning).  The other class includes males with low IQ and all nearly all affected females, who tend to have low IQ.   
Importantly, the team found recurrent de novo gene-disrupting mutations in 27 genes, which make them highly likely to be causal factors in the most severe cases – i.e., in low-IQ males with ASD and in females with ASD.  Such disruptive mutations are so rare that finding them more than once in a sample of several thousand people is powerful proof of their importance in ASD.

Girls are thought to have a protective factor, still unidentified, against the impact of potentially causal mutations.  But the new data reinforces the view that when females do get ASD, it is often because genes that are highly active in early development incur devastating, disrupting mutations.  No such temporal pattern is seen in boys.  But the same mutations, in boys, are hypothesized to be responsible for the more severe male ASD cases, including boys with low IQ.

The research in the new paper is based on what scientists call whole exome sequencing – sequencing only the 2% of the full human genome that encodes proteins.

Prior exome studies of intellectual disability and schizophrenia, the authors note, have turned up sets of genes significantly overlapping those identified in the new ASD study.  The largest overlap is seen in genes that express messages to which proteins called FMRP bind.  FMRP is the protein encoded by the gene FMR1, whose dysfunction causes Fragile-X syndrome and is a major risk factor in intellectual disability.

“Our findings lend new weight to the hypothesis that there are specific functional categories of genes – likely conserved by evolution in development of the human neurological system and brain – that strongly contribute to autism’s causation, such as genes expressed during embryonic development and genes that encode proteins that remodel chromatin, the bundles in which our DNA is stored,” says Research Assistant Professor Michael Ronemus, a member of the CSHL team.

Other CSHL contributors to the study include Assistant Professor Dan Levy, Associate Professor Michael Schatz and Professor W. Richard McCombie. Dr. Evan Eichler of the University of Washington, Seattle, and Dr. Matthew State, formerly of Yale University and now at UC San Francisco, were co-prinicipal investigators, alongside CSHL’s Wigler.

The research described here was made possible in part by grants from the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative, HHMI, and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

“The contribution of de novo coding mutations to autism spectrum disorder” by Ivan Iossifov et al appears online in Nature on October 29, 2014. The paper can be obtained here.

About Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Founded in 1890, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) has shaped contemporary biomedical research and education with programs in cancer, neuroscience, plant biology and quantitative biology. CSHL is ranked number one in the world by Thomson Reuters for the impact of its research in molecular biology and genetics. The Laboratory has been home to eight Nobel Prize winners. Today, CSHL's multidisciplinary scientific community is more than 600 researchers and technicians strong and its Meetings & Courses program hosts more than 12,000 scientists from around the world each year to its Long Island campus and its China center.

Pictured Below:

Graph # 1: Considerably more boys are diagnosed with ASD than girls, who are likely to have an as yet unknown protective factor that protects them from the deleterious effects of some but not all mutations. Yet this graphic shows that among girls in the Simons Simplex Collection who do have ASD (red bars), a preponderance have a non-verbal IQ of less than 90. (IQ is indicated on the horizontal axis; the number of affected on the vertical axis.) Affected boys, while more numerous, tend to have higher IQ and less severe ASD symptoms, although a sizeable minority are affected just as severely as the majority of girls are.

Graph # 2: The new study by Iossifov et al conservatively estimates that 30% of all cases of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are caused by de novo, or "spontaneous" mutations -- DNA mutations appearing in a child that neither parent has. This chart compares the contributions to ASD of 3 major types of de novo mutations. From left: large-scale copy number variations, or CNVs, about 6%; likely gene disrupting mutations, or LGDs, about 9%, and missense mutations (affecting protein function), about 12%. The far-right bar shows their combined contribution to autism: about 27%. Thin lines rising above each bar indicate possible maximum ranges, based on a mathematical model.

Feature Image by Bartek Ambrozik via Free Images.

 

Photos

  • Graph # 1 Photo by: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

  • Graph # 2 Photo by: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory