Frontiers in Psychiatry (Mar 2022)

Contribution of CACNA1H Variants in Autism Spectrum Disorder Susceptibility

  • Marta Viggiano,
  • Tiziano D'Andrea,
  • Cinzia Cameli,
  • Annio Posar,
  • Annio Posar,
  • Paola Visconti,
  • Maria Cristina Scaduto,
  • Roberta Colucci,
  • Roberta Colucci,
  • Magali J. Rochat,
  • Fabiola Ceroni,
  • Giorgio Milazzo,
  • Sergio Fucile,
  • Sergio Fucile,
  • Elena Maestrini,
  • Elena Bacchelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.858238
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a highly heterogeneous neuropsychiatric disorder with a strong genetic component. The genetic architecture is complex, consisting of a combination of common low-risk and more penetrant rare variants. Voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs or Cav) genes have been implicated as high-confidence susceptibility genes for ASD, in accordance with the relevant role of calcium signaling in neuronal function. In order to further investigate the involvement of VGCCs rare variants in ASD susceptibility, we performed whole genome sequencing analysis in a cohort of 105 families, composed of 124 ASD individuals, 210 parents and 58 unaffected siblings. We identified 53 rare inherited damaging variants in Cav genes, including genes coding for the principal subunit and genes coding for the auxiliary subunits, in 40 ASD families. Interestingly, biallelic rare damaging missense variants were detected in the CACNA1H gene, coding for the T-type Cav3.2 channel, in ASD probands from two different families. Thus, to clarify the role of these CACNA1H variants on calcium channel activity we performed electrophysiological analysis using whole-cell patch clamp technology. Three out of four tested variants were shown to mildly affect Cav3.2 channel current density and activation properties, possibly leading to a dysregulation of intracellular Ca2+ ions homeostasis, thus altering calcium-dependent neuronal processes and contributing to ASD etiology in these families. Our results provide further support for the role of CACNA1H in neurodevelopmental disorders and suggest that rare CACNA1H variants may be involved in ASD development, providing a high-risk genetic background.

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