학술논문

Investigation the Relationship of Autism Spectrum Disorder and FOXP2, GRIN2B, KATNAL2, GABRA4 Genes.
Document Type
Article
Source
Archives of Neuropsychiatry / Nöropsikiyatri Arşivi. Sep2021, Vol. 58 Issue 3, p171-175. 5p.
Subject
*PROTEINS
*SEQUENCE analysis
*GENETIC variation
*GENETIC testing
*RISK assessment
*AUTISM
*DISEASE susceptibility
*LONGITUDINAL method
Language
ISSN
1300-0667
Abstract
Introduction: Autism spectrum disorder is a genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous group. Genetic studies carried out to date have suggested that both common and rare genetic variants play a role in the etiology of this disorder. In our study, we aimed to investigate the effect of FOXP2, GRIN2B, KATNAL2 and GABRA4 gene variants in the pathogenesis of autism spectrum disorder. Method: In our prospectively planned study, all exons and exon-intron junctions of FOXP2, GRIN2B, KATNAL2 and GABRA4 genes were screened by next generation sequencing analysis in 96 patients who diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. Results: In our study, the average age was 10.1 and the male/female ratio was 75/21. Pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants were not detected in FOXP2, GRIN2B, KATNAL2 and GABRA4 genes, however, 69 intronic variants of unknown clinical significance were detected in 50 cases (52%). Among those, 26 were in the GABRA4 gene, 22 in the FOXP2 gene, 13 in the KATNAL2 gene, and 8 in the GRIN2B gene. Twenty three of these 69 variants were novel that were not previously reported in the literature. Conclusion: In our study, we could not identify a relationship between the autism spectrum disorder and FOXP2, GRIN2B, KATNAL2 and GABRA4 genes. Identifying genetic risk factors that play a role in the etiopathogenesis of autism spectrum disorder will contribute significantly to understanding the molecular mechanisms of the disease and the development of new treatment strategies. In this context, comprehensive molecular genetic studies such as whole exome or whole genome sequencing are required with higher number of cases in different populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]