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Another
Significant Finding Among
135 individuals with autism screened, the researchers identified two
families in which mutated variants of WNT2 were found in just one parent
and in affected, but not in well, siblings. Both mutations were in coding
regions of the gene. No mutated variants of WNT2 were found in 160 controls.
Although they each affect only one of the gene's 1082 nucleotides, the
mutations alter the amino acid composition of the WNT2 protein, and
could impair the functioning of proteins and downstream biological pathways
involved in brain development. The
researchers also produced evidence for the existence of a more common
WNT2 variant that may be involved in more cases of autism. A nucleotide
sequence variant (specifically, a single nucleotide polymorphism or
SNP) in a non-coding part of the gene was found to be transmitted to
autistic children more often than would be expected by chance. The SNP
was also found to be associated with the group's prior evidence for
linkage of 7q to autism, particularly in families with more severe language "Virtually all of our original 7q linkage signal had arisen from 50 families with severe language abnormalities," noted the researchers. When the researchers split those families into two groups based on the SNP variant, they found a striking separation of the linkage signal. In 24 families transmitting the associated SNP variant, the linkage signal increased from the original 2.7 to 3.7, providing strong support for linkage, while in the 26 other families, the linkage signal decreased to nearly 0. This
lopsided split in the linkage signal supports the possibility that the
SNP, or an as yet undiscovered nearby polymorphism, could confer susceptibility
to autism by influencing expression of WNT2. Wassink and colleagues
also showed that WNT2 is expressed in the human brain's thalamus. They
note that there is evidence to suggest that a circuit involving the
thalamus and frontal lobes functions abnormally in autism. Since WNT2
influences brain development in animals, researchers suspect it plays
a similar role in humans, but this would be difficult to demonstrate,
said Wassink. The strong association between WNT2 and people with severe
language impairment make the gene a strong candidate for predisposing
people to this sub-type of autism, which previous studies have associated
with the chromosome 7q area. Among
clues being followed up: a gene named "frizzled" that codes
for a receptor for the secreted WNT proteins "is right at our linkage
signal," noted Wassink. His and other groups are also looking for
mutations in other genes in WNT pathways that might be involved in autism. Also
participating in the research were: Veronica Vieland, Ph.D., Jian Huang,
Ph.D., Ruth Swiderski, Ph.D., Jennifer Pietila, Terry Braun, Gretel
Beck, Val Sheffield, M.D., Ph.D., University of Iowa; Susan Folstein,
M.D., Tufts University; Jonathan Haines, Ph.D., Vanderbilt University. The
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is part of the National Institutes
of Health (NIH), the Federal Government's primary agency for biomedical
and behavioral research. NIH is a component of the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. |
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