Abstract

We characterize the landscape of somatic mutations—mutations occurring after fertilization—in the human brain using ultra-deep (~250X) whole-genome sequencing of prefrontal cortex from 59 autism spectrum disorder (ASD) cases and 15 controls. We observe a mean of 26 somatic single nucleotide variants (sSNVs) per brain present in ≥4% of cells, with enrichment of mutations in coding and putative regulatory regions. Our analysis reveals that the first cell division after fertilization produces ~3.4 mutations, followed by 2–3 mutations in subsequent generations. This suggests that a typical individual possesses ~80 sSNVs present in ≥2% of cells—comparable to the number of de novo germline mutations per generation—with about half of individuals having at least one potentially function-altering somatic mutation somewhere in the cortex. ASD brains show an excess of somatic mutations in neural enhancer sequences compared to controls, suggesting that mosaic enhancer mutations may contribute to ASD risk.

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