Mazina Varvara, Gerdts Jennifer, Trinh Sandy, Ankenman Katy, Ward Tracey, Dennis Megan Y, Girirajan Santhosh, Eichler Evan E, Bernier Raphael
*University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA; Departments of †Psychiatry, and ‡Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; §Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; ‖Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2015 Feb-Mar;36(2):61-7. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000000126.
Epidemiological data have suggested maternal infection and fever to be associated with increased risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Animal studies show that gestational infections perturb fetal brain development and result in offspring with the core features of autism and have demonstrated that behavioral effects of maternal immune activation are dependent on genetic susceptibility. The goal of this study was to explore the impact of ASD-associated copy number variants (CNVs) and prenatal maternal infection on clinical severity of ASD within a dataset of prenatal history and complete genetic and phenotypic findings.
We analyzed data from the Simons Simplex Collection sample including 1971 children with a diagnosis of ASD aged 4 to 18 years who underwent array comparative genomic hybridization screening. Information on infection and febrile episodes during pregnancy was collected through parent interview. ASD severity was clinically measured through parent-reported interview and questionnaires.
We found significant interactive effects between the presence of CNVs and maternal infection during pregnancy on autistic symptomatology, such that individuals with CNVs and history of maternal infection demonstrated increased rates of social communicative impairments and repetitive/restricted behaviors. In contrast, no significant interactions were found between presence of CNVs and prenatal infections on cognitive and adaptive functioning of individuals with ASD.
Our findings support a gene-environment interaction model of autism impairment, in that individuals with ASD-associated CNVs are more susceptible to the effects of maternal infection and febrile episodes in pregnancy on behavioral outcomes and suggest that these effects are specific to ASD rather than to global neurodevelopment.
流行病学数据表明,母亲感染和发热与自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)风险增加有关。动物研究表明,孕期感染会干扰胎儿大脑发育,导致后代出现自闭症的核心特征,并且已经证明母体免疫激活的行为影响取决于遗传易感性。本研究的目的是在一个包含产前病史以及完整基因和表型结果的数据集中,探讨与ASD相关的拷贝数变异(CNV)和产前母亲感染对ASD临床严重程度的影响。
我们分析了来自西蒙斯单基因队列研究样本的数据,该样本包括1971名年龄在4至18岁之间被诊断为ASD的儿童,他们接受了阵列比较基因组杂交筛查。通过家长访谈收集孕期感染和发热发作的信息。通过家长报告的访谈和问卷对ASD严重程度进行临床测量。
我们发现CNV的存在与孕期母亲感染之间对自闭症症状存在显著的交互作用,即患有CNV且有母亲感染史的个体社交沟通障碍和重复/受限行为的发生率增加。相比之下,在患有ASD的个体中,未发现CNV的存在与产前感染对认知和适应功能有显著的交互作用。
我们的研究结果支持自闭症损害的基因-环境交互作用模型,即患有与ASD相关CNV的个体更容易受到孕期母亲感染和发热发作对行为结果的影响,并表明这些影响是ASD特有的,而非对整体神经发育的影响。