Analysis of <i>CHRNA7</i> rare variants in autism spectrum disorder susceptibility

Elena Bacchelli(University of Bologna), Agatino Battaglia(Fondazione Stella Maris), Cinzia Cameli(University of Bologna), Silvia Lomartire(University of Bologna), Raffaella Tancredi(Fondazione Stella Maris), Susanne Thomson(Vanderbilt University), James S. Sutcliffe(Vanderbilt University), Elena Maestrini(University of Bologna)
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
February 5, 2015
Cited by 56

Abstract

Chromosome 15q13.3 recurrent microdeletions are causally associated with a wide range of phenotypes, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), seizures, intellectual disability, and other psychiatric conditions. Whether the reciprocal microduplication is pathogenic is less certain. CHRNA7, encoding for the alpha7 subunit of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, is considered the likely culprit gene in mediating neurological phenotypes in 15q13.3 deletion cases. To assess if CHRNA7 rare variants confer risk to ASD, we performed copy number variant analysis and Sanger sequencing of the CHRNA7 coding sequence in a sample of 135 ASD cases. Sequence variation in this gene remains largely unexplored, given the existence of a fusion gene, CHRFAM7A, which includes a nearly identical partial duplication of CHRNA7. Hence, attempts to sequence coding exons must distinguish between CHRNA7 and CHRFAM7A, making next-generation sequencing approaches unreliable for this purpose. A CHRNA7 microduplication was detected in a patient with autism and moderate cognitive impairment; while no rare damaging variants were identified in the coding region, we detected rare variants in the promoter region, previously described to functionally reduce transcription. This study represents the first sequence variant analysis of CHRNA7 in a sample of idiopathic autism.


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