grant

1/4 - The Autism Sequencing Consortium: Discovering autism risk genes and how they impact core features of the disorder

Organization ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAILocation NEW YORK, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Mar 2022Deadline 31 Dec 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20261st trimester21+ years oldANK2ANK2 geneASDAccelerationAdultAdult HumanAffectAnkyrin 2Ankyrin-BAutismAutistic DisorderBrain AnkyrinBrain DiseasesBrain DisordersCell Communication and SignalingCell SignalingClinicalCopy Number PolymorphismDNA mutationDataDevelopmentDiagnosisDiseaseDisorderEarly Infantile AutismEarly Placental PhaseEncephalon DiseasesFamilyFirst Pregnancy TrimesterFirst TrimesterFoundationsGeneral PopulationGeneral PublicGenesGeneticGenetic ChangeGenetic DiversityGenetic RiskGenetic VariationGenetic defectGenetic mutationGoalsHereditaryHeterogeneityIndividualInfantile AutismInheritedInternationalIntracellular Communication and SignalingIntracranial CNS DisordersIntracranial Central Nervous System DisordersKanner's SyndromeKnowledgeLearningLinkMental disordersMental health disordersMethodsMissense MutationMissionMutationNational Institutes of HealthNeurodevelopmental DisorderNeurological Development DisorderNeuronal AnkyrinNonerythroid AnkyrinNucleotidesOutcomePathogenesisPathway interactionsPatternPlayPopulationPreventionProcessPsychiatric DiseasePsychiatric DisorderPublic HealthR-Series Research ProjectsR01 MechanismR01 ProgramRFX3RecommendationResearchResearch GrantsResearch Project GrantsResearch ProjectsResearch ResourcesResourcesRiskRisk-associated variantRoleSEQ-ANSamplingSequence AnalysesSequence AnalysisSignal TransductionSignal Transduction SystemsSignalingSiteSourceStatistical MethodsSymptomsTOPMedTrans-Omics for Precision MedicineTransmissionUnited States National Institutes of HealthVariantVariationadulthoodanalytical methodautism attributesautism indicatorautism spectral disorderautism spectrum disorderautism spectrum disorder featuresautism spectrum disorder indicatorautism spectrum disorder symptomsautism symptomologyautism symptomsautism-like symptomsautism-related attributesautistic featuresautistic spectrum disorderautistic symptomsautistic traitsautistic-like symptomsbiological signal transductioncell typecohortcopy number variantcopy number variationdevelopmentaldevelopmental diseasedevelopmental disorderdiscover genesdisease riskdisorder riskentire genomeexomefull genomefunctional genomicsgain of functiongene discoverygenetic architecturegenome mutationgenomic datagenomic datasetimprovedindelinnovateinnovationinnovativeinsertion/deletioninsertion/deletion mutationinsightloss of functionlow-frequency mutationmental illnessmissense single nucleotide polymorphismmissense single nucleotide variantmissense variantneurodevelopmental diseaseneuropsychiatric diseaseneuropsychiatric disordernew drug treatmentsnew drugsnew pharmacological therapeuticnew therapeuticsnew therapynext generation therapeuticsnovelnovel drug treatmentsnovel drugsnovel pharmaco-therapeuticnovel pharmacological therapeuticnovel therapeuticsnovel therapypathwaypopulation basedpsychiatric illnesspsychological disorderrare allelerare mutationrare variantrepetitive behaviorrisk allelerisk generisk genotyperisk locirisk locusrisk variantsexsocial defectssocial deficitssocial disorderssocial dysfunctionsocial rolestatistic methodstherapeutic targettransmission processwhole genome
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Full Description

Project Summary/Abstract
The past decade has seen outstanding advances in the genetics of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Most of

this progress has occurred by the study of rare genetic variation, especially de novo variation, with the Autism

Sequencing Consortium (ASC) playing a central role. The ASC represents a coordinated international effort to

identify ASD risk genes. In our most recent, unpublished, analyses of 72,410 individuals from ASD families, we

identified 185 genes associated with risk (FDR < 0.05). Some of these genes have been linked to a broad

array of developmental disorders, while others have not. Based on these results, we posit that some risk genes

alter the core features of ASD, while creating fewer perturbations to other features of development: discovery

of such genes will provide deeper insights into pathways disrupted in ASD. We will build on this progress by

analysis of sequence data from three resources: ASD subjects and families; subjects with other developmental

and neuropsychiatric disorders; and subjects from population samples. We plan new research focusing on

interpretation of rare variation, including single nucleotide variation (SNV), indels, and copy number variation

(CNV). Our key targets are inherited variants, including X-linked inherited variants, which to date have shown

very little signal, and missense variants, for which signal has been confined to highly conserved substitutions.

We anticipate doubling the number of ASD genes discovered, ~ 400, by increasing the number of families

analyzed and by refined methods to interpret inherited and missense variation. And, in parallel, we expect to

resolve critical aspects of ASD genetic architecture and to unveil key aspects of what makes ASD and its core

features – social deficits and restrictive and repetitive behaviors – different from other neurodevelopmental

disorders. To discover ASD risk genes with a distinct effect on ASD, we have the following specific aims: 1) To

amalgamate existing and emerging whole exome and whole genome sequence data; 2) To develop new

analytical methods and analyze the accumulated sequence data; and, 3) To contrast ASD and other

neurodevelopmental disorder risk genes, examining developmental profiles, cell types implicated, and whether

variants in the same gene differ in how they affect risk for ASD and other neurodevelopmental and psychiatric

disorders. With this new research we will accelerate our overall objective, which is the identification of ASD

genes, thereby facilitating our long-term goal of building the foundation from which therapeutic targets for ASD

emerge. Our rationale is that the identification of genes conferring significant risk to ASD and associated

neurodevelopmental disorders can form the basis of studies to understand pathogenesis, as well as the basis

for novel therapies. Our central hypothesis – formulated based on results over the past decade – is that rare

and common variation contributes additively to risk for ASD, but only certain rare variants confer substantial

risk. The research proposed is innovative, in our opinion, because it uses groundbreaking and novel statistical

methods for identifying risk variants for ASD.

Grant Number: 5R01MH129724-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Joseph Buxbaum

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