College of Health Solutions, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Department of Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering, Schools of Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Brain Behav. 2020 Aug;10(8):e01735. doi: 10.1002/brb3.1735. Epub 2020 Jun 28.
Past research has suggested that reading disability is a complex disorder involving genetic and environment contributions, as well as gene-gene and gene-environment interaction, but to date little is known about the underlying mechanisms.
Using the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, we assessed the contributions of genetic, demographic, and environmental variables on case-control status using machine learning. We investigated the functional interactions between genes using pathway and network analysis.
Our results support a systems approach to studying the etiology of reading disability with many genes (e.g., RAPGEF2, KIAA0319, DLC1) and biological pathways (e.g., neuron migration, positive regulation of dendrite regulation, nervous system development) interacting with each other. We found that single nucleotide variants within genes often had opposite effects and that enriched biological pathways were mediated by neuron migration. We also identified behavioral (i.e., receptive language, nonverbal intelligence, and vocabulary), demographic (i.e., mother's highest education), and environmental (i.e., birthweight) factors that influenced case-control status when accounting for genetic information.
The behavioral and demographic factors were suggested to be protective against reading disability status, while birthweight conveyed risk. We provided supporting evidence that reading disability has a complex biological and environmental etiology and that there may be a shared genetic and neurobiological architecture for reading (dis)ability.
过去的研究表明,阅读障碍是一种复杂的疾病,涉及遗传和环境因素,以及基因-基因和基因-环境相互作用,但迄今为止,其潜在机制知之甚少。
我们使用阿冯纵向父母与子女研究(Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children),使用机器学习评估遗传、人口统计学和环境变量对病例对照状态的贡献。我们使用途径和网络分析研究基因之间的功能相互作用。
我们的研究结果支持采用系统方法研究阅读障碍的病因,许多基因(如 RAPGEF2、KIAA0319、DLC1)和生物学途径(如神经元迁移、树突调节的正调节、神经系统发育)相互作用。我们发现,基因内的单核苷酸变异通常具有相反的作用,并且丰富的生物学途径是由神经元迁移介导的。我们还发现,在考虑遗传信息时,行为(即接受性语言、非言语智力和词汇)、人口统计学(即母亲的最高教育程度)和环境(即出生体重)因素会影响病例对照状态。
行为和人口统计学因素被认为对阅读障碍状态具有保护作用,而出生体重则带来风险。我们提供了支持性证据,表明阅读障碍具有复杂的生物学和环境病因,并且阅读(障碍)可能具有共同的遗传和神经生物学结构。