http://www.wiringthebrain.com/2012/04/de-novo-mutations-in-autism.html
A trio of papers in this week’s
Nature
identifies mutations causing autism in four new genes, demonstrate the
importance of de novo mutations in the etiology of this disorder and
suggest that there may be 1,000 or more genes in which high-risk,
autism-causing mutations can occur.
These studies provide an
explanation for what seems like a paradox: on the one hand, twin studies
show that autism is very strongly genetic (identical twins are much
more likely to share a diagnosis than fraternal twins) – on the other,
many cases are sporadic, with no one else in the family affected. How
can the condition be “genetic” but not always run in the family? The
explanation is that many cases are caused by new mutations – ones that
arise in the germline of the parents. (This is similar to conditions
like Down syndrome). The studies reported in Nature are trying to find
those mutations and see which genes are affected.
They are only
possible because of the tremendous advances in our ability to sequence
DNA. The first genome cost three billion dollars to sequence and took
ten years – we can do one now for a couple thousand dollars in a few
days. That means you can scan through the entire genome in any affected
individual for mutated genes. The problem is we each carry hundreds of
such mutations, making it difficult to recognise the ones that are
really causing disease.
The solution is to sequence the DNA of
large numbers of people with the same condition and see if the same
genes pop up multiple times. That is what these studies aimed to do,
with samples of a couple hundred patients each. They also concentrated
on families where autism was present in only one child and looked
specifically for mutations in that child that were not carried by either
parent – so-called
de novo mutations,
that arise in the generation of sperm or eggs. These are the easiest
to detect because they are likely to be the most severe. (Mutations
with very severe effects are unlikely to be passed on because the people
who carry them are far less likely to have children).
[1] There is
already strong evidence that de novo mutations play an important role in
the etiology of autism – first, de novo copy number variants (deletions
or duplications of chunks of chromosomes) appear at a significantly
higher rate in autism patients compared to controls (in 8% of patients
compared to 2% of controls). [2] Second, it has been known for a while that
the risk of autism increases with paternal age – that is, older fathers
are more likely to have a child with autism. (Initial studies
suggested the risk was up to five-fold greater in fathers over forty –
these figures have been revised downwards with increasing sample sizes,
but the effect remains very significant, with risk increasing
monotonically with paternal age). This is also true of schizophrenia
and, in fact, of dominant Mendelian disorders in general (those caused
by single mutations).
[3] The reason is that the germ cells generating
sperm in men continue to divide throughout their lifetime, leading to an
increased chance of a mutation having happened as time goes on.
The
three studies in Nature were looking for a different class of mutation –
point mutations or changes in single DNA bases.
[4]They each provide a
list of genes with de novo mutations found in specific patients.
Several of these showed a mutation in more than one (unrelated) patient,
providing strong evidence that these mutations are likely to be causing
autism in those patients. [5] The genes with multiple hits include CHD8,
SCN2A, KATNAL2 and NTNG1. Mutations in the last of these, NTNG1, were
only found in two patients but have been previously implicated as a rare cause of Rett syndrome. [6] This gene encodes the protein Netrin-G1, which is involved in the guidance of growing nerves and the specification of neuronal connections. CHD8
is a chromatin-remodeling factor and is involved in Wnt signaling, a
major neurodevelopmental pathway, as well as interacting with p53, which
controls cell growth and division. SCN2A
encodes a sodium channel subunit; mutations in this gene are involved
in a variety of epilepsies. Not much is known about KATNAL2, except by
homology – it is related to proteins katanin and spastin,
which sever microtubules – mutations in spastin are associated with
hereditary spastic paraplegia. [7] How the specific mutations observed in
these genes cause the symptoms of autism in these patients (or
contribute to them) is not clear – these discoveries are just a starting
point, but they will greatly aid the quest to understand the biological
basis of this disorder.
[8] The fact that these studies only got a
few repeat hits also means that there are probably many hundreds or even
thousands of genes that can cause autism when mutated (if there were
only a small number, we would see more repeat hits). Some of these will
be among the other genes on the lists provided by these studies and
will no doubt be recognisable as more patients are sequenced.
Interestingly, many of the genes on the lists are involved in aspects of
nervous system development or function and encode proteins that
interact closely with each other – this makes it more likely that they
are really involved.
These studies reinforce the fact that
autism is not one disorder - not clinically and not genetically either.
Like intellectual disability or epilepsy or many other conditions, it
can be caused by mutations in any of a very large number of genes. The
ones we know about so far make up around 30% of cases – these new
studies add to that list and also show how far we have to go to complete
it.
We should recognise too that the picture will also get more
complex – in many cases there may be more than one mutation involved in
causing the disease. De novo mutations are likely to be the most
severe class and thus most likely to cause disease with high penetrance
themselves. But many inherited mutations may cause autism only in
combination with one or a few other mutations.
These
complexities will emerge over time, but for now we can aim to recognise
the simpler cases where a mutation in a particular gene is clearly
implicated. Each new gene discovered means that the fraction of cases
we can assign to a specific cause increases. As we learn more about the
biology of each case, those genetic diagnoses will have important
implications for prognosis, treatment and reproductive decisions. We
can aim to diagnose and treat the underlying cause in each patient and
not just the symptoms.