Primary complex motor stereotypies are associated with de novo damaging DNA coding mutations that identify KDM5B as a risk gene

Author:

Fernandez Thomas V.ORCID,Williams Zsanett P.,Kline Tina,Rajendran Shreenath,Augustine Farhan,Wright Nicole,Sullivan Catherine A. W.,Olfson Emily,Abdallah Sarah B.,Liu Wenzhong,Hoffman Ellen J.,Gupta Abha R.,Singer Harvey S.

Abstract

Motor stereotypies are common in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), intellectual disability, or sensory deprivation, as well as in typically developing children (“primary” stereotypies, pCMS). The precise pathophysiological mechanism for motor stereotypies is unknown, although genetic etiologies have been suggested. In this study, we perform whole-exome DNA sequencing in 129 parent-child trios with pCMS and 853 control trios (118 cases and 750 controls after quality control). We report an increased rate of de novo predicted-damaging DNA coding variants in pCMS versus controls, identifying KDM5B as a high-confidence risk gene and estimating 184 genes conferring risk. Genes harboring de novo damaging variants in pCMS probands show significant overlap with those in Tourette syndrome, ASD, and those in ASD probands with high versus low stereotypy scores. An exploratory analysis of these pCMS gene expression patterns finds clustering within the cortex and striatum during early mid-fetal development. Exploratory gene ontology and network analyses highlight functional convergence in calcium ion transport, demethylation, cell signaling, cell cycle and development. Continued sequencing of pCMS trios will identify additional risk genes and provide greater insights into biological mechanisms of stereotypies across diagnostic boundaries.

Funder

Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative

Allison Family Foundation

Nesbitt-McMaster Foundation

Klump Family

Graves Family

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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