Ronald Angelica, Happé Francesca, Price Thomas S, Baron-Cohen Simon, Plomin Robert
Drs. Ronald, Happé, and Plomin are with the Social Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London; Dr. Price is with the Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia; and Dr. Baron-Cohen is with the Autism Research Centre, Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK.
Drs. Ronald, Happé, and Plomin are with the Social Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London; Dr. Price is with the Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia; and Dr. Baron-Cohen is with the Autism Research Centre, Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2006 Oct;45(10):1206-1214. doi: 10.1097/01.chi.0000230165.54117.41.
To investigate children selected from a community sample for showing extreme autistic-like traits and to assess the degree to which these individual traits--social impairments (SIs), communication impairments (CIs), and restricted repetitive behaviors and interests (RRBIs)--are caused by genes and environments, whether all of them are caused by the same genes and environments, and how often they occur together (as required by an autism diagnosis).
The most extreme-scoring 5% were selected from 3,419 8-year-old pairs in the Twins Early Development Study assessed on the Childhood Asperger Syndrome Test. Phenotypic associations between extreme traits were compared with associations among the full-scale scores. Genetic associations between extreme traits were quantified using bivariate DeFries-Fulker extremes analysis.
Phenotypic relationships between extreme SIs, CIs, and RRBIs were modest. There was a degree of genetic overlap between them, but also substantial genetic specificity.
This first twin study assessing the links between extreme individual autistic-like traits (SIs, CIs, and RRBIs) found that all are highly heritable but show modest phenotypic and genetic overlap. This finding concurs with that of an earlier study from the same cohort that showed that a total autistic symptoms score at the extreme showed high heritability and that SIs, CIs, and RRBIs show weak links in the general population. This new finding has relevance for both clinical models and future molecular genetic studies.
对从社区样本中选取的具有极端自闭症样特征的儿童进行调查,并评估这些个体特征——社交障碍(SIs)、沟通障碍(CIs)以及局限的重复行为和兴趣(RRBIs)——在多大程度上由基因和环境引起,它们是否都由相同的基因和环境引起,以及它们共同出现的频率(如自闭症诊断所要求的)。
在双胞胎早期发展研究中,从3419对8岁双胞胎中选取在儿童阿斯伯格综合征测试中得分最高的5%。将极端特征之间的表型关联与全量表得分之间的关联进行比较。使用双变量德弗里斯 - 富尔克极端分析对极端特征之间的遗传关联进行量化。
极端的社交障碍、沟通障碍和局限的重复行为及兴趣之间的表型关系较弱。它们之间存在一定程度的遗传重叠,但也有显著的遗传特异性。
这项首次对极端个体自闭症样特征(社交障碍、沟通障碍和局限的重复行为及兴趣)之间的联系进行评估的双胞胎研究发现,所有这些特征都具有高度遗传性,但表型和遗传重叠较弱。这一发现与来自同一队列的早期研究结果一致,该早期研究表明,极端情况下的总自闭症症状得分具有高遗传性,并且社交障碍、沟通障碍和局限的重复行为及兴趣在一般人群中显示出较弱的联系。这一新发现对临床模型和未来的分子遗传学研究都具有重要意义。