Vilela Joana, Martiniano Hugo, Marques Ana Rita, Santos João Xavier, Rasga Célia, Oliveira Guiomar, Vicente Astrid Moura
Departamento de Promoção da Saúde e Doenças Não Transmissíveis, Instituto Nacional de Saúde Doutor Ricardo Jorge, Lisbon, Portugal.
Faculty of Sciences, BioISI-Biosystems & Integrative Sciences Institute, University of Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.
Front Mol Neurosci. 2022 Aug 18;15:932305. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2022.932305. eCollection 2022.
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with heterogeneous clinical presentation, variable severity, and multiple comorbidities. A complex underlying genetic architecture matches the clinical heterogeneity, and evidence indicates that several co-occurring brain disorders share a genetic component with ASD. In this study, we established a genetic similarity disease network approach to explore the shared genetics between ASD and frequent comorbid brain diseases (and subtypes), namely Intellectual Disability, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, and Epilepsy, as well as other rarely co-occurring neuropsychiatric conditions in the Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disease spectrum. Using sets of disease-associated genes curated by the DisGeNET database, disease genetic similarity was estimated from the Jaccard coefficient between disease pairs, and the Leiden detection algorithm was used to identify network disease communities and define shared biological pathways. We identified a heterogeneous brain disease community that is genetically more similar to ASD, and that includes Epilepsy, Bipolar Disorder, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder combined type, and some disorders in the Schizophrenia Spectrum. To identify loss-of-function rare variants within shared genes underlying the disease communities, we analyzed a large ASD whole-genome sequencing dataset, showing that ASD shares genes with multiple brain disorders from other, less genetically similar, communities. Some genes (e.g., , and ) were previously implicated in ASD and these disorders. This approach enabled further clarification of genetic sharing between ASD and brain disorders, with a finer granularity in disease classification and multi-level evidence from DisGeNET. Understanding genetic sharing across disorders has important implications for disease nosology, pathophysiology, and personalized treatment.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)是一种神经发育障碍,临床表现具有异质性,严重程度各异,且存在多种共病。复杂的潜在遗传结构与临床异质性相匹配,有证据表明,几种同时出现的脑部疾病与ASD存在共同的遗传成分。在本研究中,我们建立了一种遗传相似性疾病网络方法,以探索ASD与常见共病脑部疾病(及其亚型)之间的共享遗传学,这些疾病包括智力残疾、注意力缺陷多动障碍和癫痫,以及精神分裂症和双相情感障碍谱系中其他罕见的共病神经精神疾病。利用DisGeNET数据库策划的疾病相关基因集,根据疾病对之间的杰卡德系数估计疾病遗传相似性,并使用 Leiden 检测算法识别网络疾病群落并定义共享的生物学途径。我们确定了一个在遗传上与ASD更相似的异质性脑部疾病群落,其中包括癫痫、双相情感障碍、注意力缺陷多动障碍合并型以及精神分裂症谱系中的一些疾病。为了识别疾病群落潜在共享基因中的功能丧失罕见变异,我们分析了一个大型ASD全基因组测序数据集,结果表明ASD与其他遗传相似性较低的群落中的多种脑部疾病共享基因。一些基因(例如 、 和 )先前已被证明与ASD和这些疾病有关。这种方法能够进一步阐明ASD与脑部疾病之间的遗传共享情况,在疾病分类上具有更精细的粒度,并提供来自DisGeNET的多层次证据。了解不同疾病之间的遗传共享情况对疾病分类学、病理生理学和个性化治疗具有重要意义。