Common genetic variants contribute to risk of rare severe neurodevelopmental disorders

被引:0
|
作者
Mari E. K. Niemi
Hilary C. Martin
Daniel L. Rice
Giuseppe Gallone
Scott Gordon
Martin Kelemen
Kerrie McAloney
Jeremy McRae
Elizabeth J. Radford
Sui Yu
Jozef Gecz
Nicholas G. Martin
Caroline F. Wright
David R. Fitzpatrick
Helen V. Firth
Matthew E. Hurles
Jeffrey C. Barrett
机构
[1] Wellcome Sanger Institute,Department of Paediatrics
[2] Wellcome Genome Campus,Department of Genetics and Molecular Pathology
[3] QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute,Adelaide Medical School and Robinson Research Institute, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
[4] University of Cambridge,Department of Clinical Genetics
[5] SA Pathology,undefined
[6] Women’s and Children’s Hospital,undefined
[7] University of Adelaide,undefined
[8] South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute,undefined
[9] University of Exeter Medical School,undefined
[10] Institute of Biomedical and Clinical Science,undefined
[11] RILD,undefined
[12] Royal Devon & Exeter Hospital,undefined
[13] MRC Human Genetics Unit,undefined
[14] MRC IGMM,undefined
[15] University of Edinburgh,undefined
[16] Western General Hospital,undefined
[17] Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,undefined
来源
Nature | 2018年 / 562卷
关键词
Neurodevelopmental Disorders; Global Developmental Delay; Polygenic Scores; Discovery GWAS; Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO);
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
There are thousands of rare human disorders that are caused by single deleterious, protein-coding genetic variants1. However, patients with the same genetic defect can have different clinical presentations2–4, and some individuals who carry known disease-causing variants can appear unaffected5. Here, to understand what explains these differences, we study a cohort of 6,987 children assessed by clinical geneticists to have severe neurodevelopmental disorders such as global developmental delay and autism, often in combination with abnormalities of other organ systems. Although the genetic causes of these neurodevelopmental disorders are expected to be almost entirely monogenic, we show that 7.7% of variance in risk is attributable to inherited common genetic variation. We replicated this genome-wide common variant burden by showing, in an independent sample of 728 trios (comprising a child plus both parents) from the same cohort, that this burden is over-transmitted from parents to children with neurodevelopmental disorders. Our common-variant signal is significantly positively correlated with genetic predisposition to lower educational attainment, decreased intelligence and risk of schizophrenia. We found that common-variant risk was not significantly different between individuals with and without a known protein-coding diagnostic variant, which suggests that common-variant risk affects patients both with and without a monogenic diagnosis. In addition, previously published common-variant scores for autism, height, birth weight and intracranial volume were all correlated with these traits within our cohort, which suggests that phenotypic expression in individuals with monogenic disorders is affected by the same variants as in the general population. Our results demonstrate that common genetic variation affects both overall risk and clinical presentation in neurodevelopmental disorders that are typically considered to be monogenic.
引用
收藏
页码:268 / 271
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Common genetic variants contribute to risk of rare severe neurodevelopmental disorders
    Niemi, Mari E. K.
    Martin, Hilary C.
    Rice, Daniel L.
    Gallon, Giuseppe
    Gordon, Scott
    Kelemen, Martin
    McAloney, Kerrie
    McRae, Jeremy
    Radford, Elizabeth J.
    Yu, Sui
    Gecz, Jozef
    Martin, Nicholas G.
    Wright, Caroline F.
    Fitzpatrick, David R.
    Firth, Helen, V
    Hurles, Matthew E.
    Barrett, Jeffrey C.
    NATURE, 2018, 562 (7726) : 268 - +
  • [2] Common genetic risk variants for ADHD contribute to neurodevelopmental and externalizing population traits
    Brikell, Isabell
    Larsson, Henrik
    Yi, Lu
    Pettersson, Erik
    Chen, Qi
    Kuja-Halkola, Ralf
    Karlsson, Robert
    Lichtenstein, Paul
    Martin, Joanna
    BEHAVIOR GENETICS, 2017, 47 (06) : 655 - 655
  • [3] COMMON GENETIC RISK VARIANTS FOR ADHD CONTRIBUTE TO CHILDHOOD NEURODEVELOPMENTAL AND EXTERNALIZING TRAITS IN THE POPULATION
    Brikell, Isabell
    Larsson, Henrik
    Yi, Lu
    Petterson, Erik
    Chen, Qi
    Kuja-Halkola, Ralf
    Karlsson, Robert
    Lichtenstein, Paul
    Martin, Joanna
    EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2019, 29 : S811 - S811
  • [4] Common and Rare Genetic Variants That Could Contribute to Severe Otitis Media in an Australian Aboriginal Population
    Jamieson, Sarra E.
    Fakiola, Michaela
    Tang, Dave
    Scaman, Elizabeth
    Syn, Genevieve
    Francis, Richard W.
    Coates, Harvey L.
    Anderson, Denise
    Lassmann, Timo
    Cordell, Heather J.
    Blackwell, Jenefer M.
    CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2021, 73 (10) : 1860 - 1870
  • [5] DISSECTING THE CONTRIBUTION OF COMMON VARIANTS TO RISK OF RARE NEURODEVELOPMENTAL CONDITIONS
    Huang, Qinqin
    Wigdor, Emilie
    Campbell, Patrick
    Malawsky, Daniel
    Samocha, Kaitlin
    Chundru, Kartik
    Danecek, Petr
    Radford, Elizabeth
    Barrett, Jeffrey
    Wright, Caroline
    Firth, Helen
    Warrier, Varun
    Young, Alexander
    Hurles, Matt
    Martin, Hilary
    EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2024, 87 : 61 - 61
  • [6] Dissecting the Contribution of Common Variants to Risk of Rare Neurodevelopmental Conditions
    Huang, Qin Qin
    Wigdor, Emilie M.
    Campbell, Patrick
    Malawsky, Daniel S.
    Samocha, Kaitlin E.
    Chundru, Kartik
    Warrier, Varun
    Young, Alexander Strudwick
    Hurles, Matthew E.
    Martin, Hilary C.
    BEHAVIOR GENETICS, 2024, 54 (06) : 507 - 507
  • [7] Common and rare genetic variants and risk of CHD
    Daniel I. Swerdlow
    Steve E. Humphries
    Nature Reviews Cardiology, 2017, 14 : 73 - 74
  • [8] Common and rare genetic variants and risk of CHD
    Swerdlow, Daniel I.
    Humphries, Steve E.
    NATURE REVIEWS CARDIOLOGY, 2017, 14 (02) : 73 - 74
  • [9] Common Genetic Variants in Rare Disorders: Hematology and Beyond
    Evangelidis, Paschalis
    Gavriilaki, Maria
    Kotsiou, Nikolaos
    Gavriilaki, Eleni
    CURRENT ISSUES IN MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2025, 47 (01)
  • [10] Rare and Common Variants in KIF15 Contribute to Genetic Risk of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
    Zhang, David
    Povysil, Gundula
    Kobeissy, Philippe H.
    Li, Qi
    Wang, Binhan
    Amelotte, Mason
    Jaouadi, Hager
    Newton, Chad A.
    Maher, Toby M.
    Molyneaux, Philip L.
    Noth, Imre
    Martinez, Fernando J.
    Raghu, Ganesh
    Todd, Jamie L.
    Palmer, Scott M.
    Haefliger, Carolina
    Platt, Adam
    Petrovski, Slave
    Garcia, Joseph A.
    Goldstein, David B.
    Garcia, Christine Kim
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2022, 206 (01) : 56 - 69