Highlights d 102 genes implicated in risk for autism spectrum disorder (ASD genes, FDR % 0.1) d Most are expressed and enriched early in excitatory and inhibitory neuronal lineages d Most affect synapses or regulate other genes; how these roles dovetail is unknown d Some ASD genes alter early development broadly, others appear more specific to ASD
SummaryWe present the largest exome sequencing study of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) to date (n=35,584 total samples, 11,986 with ASD). Using an enhanced Bayesian framework to integrate de novo and case-control rare variation, we identify 102 risk genes at a false discovery rate ≤ 0.1. Of these genes, 49 show higher frequencies of disruptive de novo variants in individuals ascertained for severe neurodevelopmental delay, while 53 show higher frequencies in individuals ascertained for ASD; comparing ASD cases with mutations in these groups reveals phenotypic differences. Expressed early in brain development, most of the risk genes have roles in regulation of gene expression or neuronal communication (i.e., mutations effect neurodevelopmental and neurophysiological changes), and 13 fall within loci recurrently hit by copy number variants. In human cortex single-cell gene expression data, expression of risk genes is enriched in both excitatory and inhibitory neuronal lineages, consistent with multiple paths to an excitatory/inhibitory imbalance underlying ASD.
IMPORTANCE The origins and development of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) remain unresolved. No individual-level study has provided estimates of additive genetic, maternal, and environmental effects in ASD across several countries. OBJECTIVE To estimate the additive genetic, maternal, and environmental effects in ASD.
Some individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) carry functional mutations rarely observed in the general population. We explored the genes disrupted by these variants from joint analysis of protein-truncating (PTV), missense, and copy number variants (CNVs) in a cohort of 63,237 individuals. We discovered 72 ASD risk genes at false discovery rate (FDR)≤0.001 (185 at FDR≤0.05). De novo PTVs, damaging missense variants, and CNVs represented 57.5%, 21.1%, and 8.44% of association evidence, while CNVs conferred greatest relative risk. Meta-analysis with cohorts ascertained for developmental delay (DD, N=91,605) yielded 373 ASD/DD risk genes at FDR≤0.001 (664 at FDR≤0.05), some of which differed in relative frequency of mutation between ASD and DD. The DD-associated genes were enriched in transcriptomes of progenitor and immature neuronal cells whereas genes displaying stronger evidence in ASD were more enriched in maturing neurons and overlapped with schizophreniaassociated genes, emphasizing that these neuropsychiatric disorders share common pathways to risk.
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