Krupp Deidre R, Barnard Rebecca A, Duffourd Yannis, Evans Sara A, Mulqueen Ryan M, Bernier Raphael, Rivière Jean-Baptiste, Fombonne Eric, O'Roak Brian J
Department of Molecular & Medical Genetics, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA.
Equipe d'Accueil 4271, Génétique des Anomalies du Développement, Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 21000 Dijon, France.
Am J Hum Genet. 2017 Sep 7;101(3):369-390. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.07.016. Epub 2017 Aug 31.
Genetic risk factors for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have yet to be fully elucidated. Postzygotic mosaic mutations (PMMs) have been implicated in several neurodevelopmental disorders and overgrowth syndromes. By leveraging whole-exome sequencing data on a large family-based ASD cohort, the Simons Simplex Collection, we systematically evaluated the potential role of PMMs in autism risk. Initial re-evaluation of published single-nucleotide variant (SNV) de novo mutations showed evidence consistent with putative PMMs for 11% of mutations. We developed a robust and sensitive SNV PMM calling approach integrating complementary callers, logistic regression modeling, and additional heuristics. In our high-confidence call set, we identified 470 PMMs in children, increasing the proportion of mosaic SNVs to 22%. Probands have a significant burden of synonymous PMMs and these mutations are enriched for computationally predicted impacts on splicing. Evidence of increased missense PMM burden was not seen in the full cohort. However, missense burden signal increased in subcohorts of families where probands lacked nonsynonymous germline mutations, especially in genes intolerant to mutations. Parental mosaic mutations that were transmitted account for 6.8% of the presumed de novo mutations in the children. PMMs were identified in previously implicated high-confidence neurodevelopmental disorder risk genes, such as CHD2, CTNNB1, SCN2A, and SYNGAP1, as well as candidate risk genes with predicted functions in chromatin remodeling or neurodevelopment, including ACTL6B, BAZ2B, COL5A3, SSRP1, and UNC79. We estimate that PMMs potentially contribute risk to 3%-4% of simplex ASD case subjects and future studies of PMMs in ASD and related disorders are warranted.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的遗传风险因素尚未完全阐明。合子后镶嵌突变(PMMs)与多种神经发育障碍和过度生长综合征有关。通过利用基于大家庭的ASD队列(西蒙斯单基因队列)的全外显子测序数据,我们系统地评估了PMMs在自闭症风险中的潜在作用。对已发表的单核苷酸变异(SNV)新发突变的初步重新评估显示,11%的突变有证据与假定的PMMs一致。我们开发了一种强大且灵敏的SNV PMM检测方法,该方法整合了互补的检测程序、逻辑回归模型和其他启发式方法。在我们的高可信度检测集中,我们在儿童中鉴定出470个PMMs,将镶嵌SNV的比例提高到22%。先证者有显著的同义PMMs负担,并且这些突变在对剪接的计算预测影响方面富集。在整个队列中未发现错义PMMs负担增加的证据。然而,在那些先证者缺乏非同义种系突变的家庭亚组中,尤其是在对突变不耐受的基因中,错义负担信号增加。传递的亲本镶嵌突变占儿童假定新发突变的6.8%。在先前涉及的高可信度神经发育障碍风险基因中发现了PMMs,如CHD2、CTNNB1、SCN2A和SYNGAP1,以及在染色质重塑或神经发育中具有预测功能的候选风险基因,包括ACTL6B、BAZ2B、COL5A3、SSRP1和UNC79。我们估计PMMs可能对3%-4%的散发性ASD病例个体造成风险,因此有必要对ASD及相关疾病中的PMMs进行进一步研究。