Contribution of autosomal rare and de novo variants to sex differences in autism.

IF 8.1 1区 生物学 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY
American journal of human genetics Pub Date : 2025-03-06 Epub Date: 2025-02-14 DOI:10.1016/j.ajhg.2025.01.016
Mahmoud Koko, F Kyle Satterstrom, Varun Warrier, Hilary Martin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Autism is four times more prevalent in males than females. To study whether this reflects a difference in genetic predisposition attributed to autosomal rare variants, we evaluated sex differences in effect size of damaging protein-truncating and missense variants on autism predisposition in 47,061 autistic individuals using a liability model with differing thresholds. Given the sex differences in the rates of cognitive impairment among autistic individuals, we also compared effect sizes of rare variants between individuals with and without cognitive impairment or motor delay. Although these variants mediated different likelihoods of autism with versus without cognitive or motor difficulties, their effect sizes on the liability scale did not differ significantly by sex exome wide or in genes sex-differentially expressed in the cortex. De novo mutations were enriched in genes with male-biased expression in the adult cortex, but these genes did not show a significant sex difference on the liability scale, nor did the liability conferred by these genes differ significantly from other genes with similar loss-of-function intolerance and sex-averaged cortical expression. Exome-wide female bias in de novo protein-truncating mutation rates on the observed scale was driven by high-confidence and syndromic autism-predisposition genes. In summary, autosomal rare and damaging coding variants confer similar liability for autism in females and males.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.70
自引率
4.10%
发文量
185
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Human Genetics (AJHG) is a monthly journal published by Cell Press, chosen by The American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) as its premier publication starting from January 2008. AJHG represents Cell Press's first society-owned journal, and both ASHG and Cell Press anticipate significant synergies between AJHG content and that of other Cell Press titles.
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