Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is one of the most prevalent and highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorders in humans. There is significant evidence that the onset and severity of ASD is governed in part by complex genetic mechanisms affecting the normal development of the brain. To date, a number of genes have been associated with ASD. However, the temporal and spatial co-expression of these genes in the brain remain unclear. To address this issue, we examined the co-expression network of 26 autism genes from AutDB (http://mindspec.org/autdb.html), in the framework of 3,041 genes whose expression energies have the highest correlation between the coronal and sagittal images from the Allen Mouse Brain Atlas database (http://mouse.brain-map.org). These data were derived from in situ hybridization experiments conducted on male, 56-day old C57BL/6J mice co-registered to the Allen Reference Atlas, and were used to generate a normalized co-expression matrix indicating the cosine similarity between expression vectors of genes in this database. The network formed by the autism-associated genes showed a higher degree of co-expression connectivity than seen for the other genes in this dataset (Kolmogorov–Smirnov P = 5×10−28). Using Monte Carlo simulations, we identified two cliques of co-expressed genes that were significantly enriched with autism genes (A Bonferroni corrected P<0.05). Genes in both these cliques were significantly over-expressed in the cerebellar cortex (P = 1×10−5) suggesting possible implication of this brain region in autism. In conclusion, our study provides a detailed profiling of co-expression patterns of autism genes in the mouse brain, and suggests specific brain regions and new candidate genes that could be involved in autism etiology.

Highlights

  • Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is one of the most prevalent and highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorders in humans [1,2,3]

  • We examined the co-expression network of 26 genes associated with ASD, using data from the Allen Mouse Brain Atlas, which provides a whole-genome, high-resolution map of gene expression pattern in the adult mouse brain

  • We examined the spatial properties of co-expression modules that are highly enriched with autism genes

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Summary

Introduction

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is one of the most prevalent and highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorders in humans [1,2,3]. While no major anatomical pathology have been observed in brains of ASD cases [5], various molecular and neuroimaging studies have linked several brain regions to ASD. Cortical regions has been highlighted in neuroimaging studies of autistic brains along the cerebellum and other brain areas [7,8]. Other studies have pointed to various molecular mechanisms that might be altered in the autistic brain [9,10,11]. In this realm, genes involved in synapse formation and brain circuitry are consistently found to be dysregulated in people with ASD [12,13,14]

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