학술논문

The joint effect of air pollution exposure and copy number variation on risk for autism
Document Type
article
Source
Autism Research. 10(9)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Applied and Developmental Psychology
Clinical and Health Psychology
Neurosciences
Psychology
Human Genome
Prevention
Genetics
Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions
Pediatric
Brain Disorders
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD)
Autism
Mental Health
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
Mental health
Air Pollution
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Case-Control Studies
Child
Preschool
DNA Copy Number Variations
Environmental Exposure
Female
Humans
Male
Particulate Matter
Pregnancy
autism
copy number variation
air pollution
gene-environment interaction
Clinical Sciences
Developmental & Child Psychology
Applied and developmental psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder is a complex trait with a high degree of heritability as well as documented susceptibility from environmental factors. In this study the contributions of copy number variation, exposure to air pollutants, and the interaction between the two on autism risk, were evaluated in the population-based case-control Childhood Autism Risks from Genetics and Environment (CHARGE) Study. For the current investigation, we included only those CHARGE children (a) who met criteria for autism or typical development and (b) for whom our team had conducted both genetic evaluation of copy number burden and determination of environmental air pollution exposures based on mapping addresses from the pregnancy and early childhood. This sample consisted of 158 cases of children with autism and 147 controls with typical development. Multiple logistic regression models were fit with and without environmental variable-copy number burden interactions. We found no correlation between average air pollution exposure from conception to age 2 years and the child's CNV burden. We found a significant interaction in which a 1SD increase in duplication burden combined with a 1SD increase in ozone exposure was associated with an elevated autism risk (OR 3.4, P