PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

A genome-wide survey of transgenerational genetic effects in autism.

  • Kathryn M Tsang,
  • Lisa A Croen,
  • Anthony R Torres,
  • Martin Kharrazi,
  • Gerald N Delorenze,
  • Gayle C Windham,
  • Cathleen K Yoshida,
  • Ousseny Zerbo,
  • Lauren A Weiss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076978
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 10
p. e76978

Abstract

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Effects of parental genotype or parent-offspring genetic interaction are well established in model organisms for a variety of traits. However, these transgenerational genetic models are rarely studied in humans. We have utilized an autism case-control study with 735 mother-child pairs to perform genome-wide screening for maternal genetic effects and maternal-offspring genetic interaction. We used simple models of single locus parent-child interaction and identified suggestive results (P<10(-4)) that cannot be explained by main effects, but no genome-wide significant signals. Some of these maternal and maternal-child associations were in or adjacent to autism candidate genes including: PCDH9, FOXP1, GABRB3, NRXN1, RELN, MACROD2, FHIT, RORA, CNTN4, CNTNAP2, FAM135B, LAMA1, NFIA, NLGN4X, RAPGEF4, and SDK1. We attempted validation of potential autism association under maternal-specific models using maternal-paternal comparison in family-based GWAS datasets. Our results suggest that further study of parental genetic effects and parent-child interaction in autism is warranted.