학술논문

Disruptive de novo mutations of DYRK1A lead to a syndromic form of autism and ID
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Molecular Psychiatry. Jan 01, 2016 21(1):126-132
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1359-4184
Abstract
Dual-specificity tyrosine-(Y)-phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1 A (DYRK1A) maps to the Down syndrome critical region; copy number increase of this gene is thought to have a major role in the neurocognitive deficits associated with Trisomy 21. Truncation of DYRK1A in patients with developmental delay (DD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) suggests a different pathology associated with loss-of-function mutations. To understand the phenotypic spectrum associated with DYRK1A mutations, we resequenced the gene in 7162 ASD/DD patients (2446 previously reported) and 2169 unaffected siblings and performed a detailed phenotypic assessment on nine patients. Comparison of our data and published cases with 8696 controls identified a significant enrichment of DYRK1A truncating mutations (P = 0.00851) and an excess of de novo mutations (P = 2.53 × 10) among ASD/intellectual disability (ID) patients. Phenotypic comparison of all novel (n = 5) and recontacted (n = 3) cases with previous case reports, including larger CNV and translocation events (n = 7), identified a syndromal disorder among the 15 patients. It was characterized by ID, ASD, microcephaly, intrauterine growth retardation, febrile seizures in infancy, impaired speech, stereotypic behavior, hypertonia and a specific facial gestalt. We conclude that mutations in DYRK1A define a syndromic form of ASD and ID with neurodevelopmental defects consistent with murine and Drosophila knockout models.