Association study of the CNS patterning genes and autism in Han Chinese in Taiwan
Journal
Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry
Journal Volume
35
Journal Volume
35
Journal Issue
6
Journal Issue
6
Pages
1512-1517
Start Page
1512
End Page
1517
ISSN
1878-4216
Date Issued
2011-08-01
Author(s)
YU-YU WU
SHIH-KAI LIU
PING-I LIN
CHIA-HSIANG CHEN
WEI-HSIEN CHIEN
Abstract
Autism is a complex neurodevelopmental disorder with high heritability. Despite different approaches worldwide to identify susceptibility loci or genes for autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), no consistent result has been reported. CNS patterning genes have been recognized as candidate genes for autism based on neuroimage and neuropathology evidence. This study investigated four candidate genes (WNT2, EN2, SHANK3, and FOXP2) by a tag SNP approach in a family-based association study. The trio samples include 1164 subjects from 393 families, including 393 probands (aged 9.1 ± 4.0 years; male, 88.6%) diagnosed with autistic disorder (n=373) or Asperger's disorder (n=20) according to the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria and confirmed by the Chinese ADI-R interview. Three tag SNPs of EN2 (7q36), 6 SNPs of WNT2 (7q31-33), 5 SNPs of SHANK3 (22q13.3), 3 SNPs of FOXP2 (7q31) were genotyped. TDT analysis was done to test the association of each tag SNP and haplotype. There was no association with autism for 17 tag SNPs of WNT2, EN2, SHANK3, and FOXP2 based on SNP analyses. Haplotype analyses did not reveal significant association except for the 6 tag SNPs of WNT2 gene showing a significant association on one haplotype composed of rs2896218 and rs6950765 (G-G) (p=0.0095). Other haplotypes composed of rs2896218 and rs6950765 (G-G) were also significantly associated with autism. The present study indicates that SHANK3 may not be a critical gene for the etiology of ASDs in Han Chinese population. Inconsistent findings in EN2 and FOXP2 in the Han Chinese population need further clarification. A haplotype of WNT2 (rs2896218-rs6950765: G-G) is significantly associated with ASDs in our trios samples, this finding warrants further validation by different sample and confirmation by functional study. ? 2011 Elsevier Inc.
SDGs
Other Subjects
article; Asperger syndrome; autism; child; Chinese; controlled study; disease association; EN2 gene; female; FOXP2 gene; gene; gene linkage disequilibrium; gene mapping; genetic association; genetic selection; genotype; haplotype; human; major clinical study; male; school child; SHANK gene; single nucleotide polymorphism; Taiwan; WNT2 gene; Asian Continental Ancestry Group; Asperger Syndrome; Autistic Disorder; Carrier Proteins; Child; Female; Forkhead Transcription Factors; Genetic Association Studies; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Genotype; Haplotypes; Homeodomain Proteins; Humans; Male; Nerve Tissue Proteins; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Taiwan; Wnt2 Protein
Type
journal article