Copy-number variants and polygenic risk for intelligence confer risk for autism spectrum disorder irrespective of their effects on cognitive ability

Author:

Schmilovich Zoe,Bourque Vincent-Raphaël,Douard Elise,Huguet Guillaume,Poulain Cécile,Ross Jay P.,Alipour Paria,Castonguay Charles-Étienne,Younis Nadine,Jean-Louis Martineau,Saci Zohra,Pausova Zdenka,Paus Tomas,Schuman Gunter,Porteous David,Davies Gail,Redmond Paul,Harris Sarah E.,Deary Ian J.,Whalley Heather,Hayward Caroline,Dion Patrick A.,Jacquemont Sébastien,Rouleau Guy A.

Abstract

ABSTRACTRare copy number variants (CNVs) and polygenic risk for intelligence (PRS-IQ) both confer risk for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) but have opposing effects on cognitive ability. The field has struggled to disentangle the effects of these two classes of genomic variants on cognitive ability from their effects on ASD risk, in part because previous studies did not include controls with cognitive measures. We aim to investigate the impact of these genomic variants on ASD risk while adjusting for their known effects on cognitive ability. In a cohort of 8,426 subjects with ASD and 169,804 controls with cognitive assessments, we found that rare coding CNVs and PRS-IQ increased ASD risk, even after adjusting for their effects on cognitive ability. Bottom decile PRS-IQ and CNVs both decreased cognitive ability but had opposing effects on ASD risk. Models combining both classes of variants showed that the effects of rare CNVs and PRS-IQ on ASD risk and cognitive ability were largely additive, further suggesting that risk for ASD is conferred independently from its effects on cognitive ability. Despite imparting mostly additive effects on ASD risk, rare CNVs and PRS-IQ showed opposing effects on core and associated features and developmental history among subjects with ASD. Our findings suggest that cognitive ability itself may not be the factor driving the underlying risk for ASD conferred by these two classes of genomic variants. In other words, ASD risk and cognitive ability may be two distinct manifestations of CNVs and PRS-IQ. This study also highlights the challenge of understanding how genetic risk for ASD maps onto its dimensional traits.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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