Mesterséges Intelligencia Nemzeti Laboratórium / Artificial Intelligence National
Laboratory(MILAB) Támogató: NKFIH
Szakterületek:
Biológiai tudományok
According to the recently proposed omnigenic theory, all expressed genes in a relevant
tissue are contributing directly or indirectly to the manifestation of complex disorders
such as autism. Thus, holistic approaches can be complementary in studying genetics
of these complex disorders to focusing on a limited number of candidate genes. Gene
interaction networks can be used for holistic studies of the omnigenic nature of autism.
We used Louvain clustering on tissue-specific gene interaction networks and their
subgraphs exclusively containing autism-related genes to study the effects of peripheral
gene interactions. We observed that the autism gene clusters are significantly weaker
connected to each other and the peripheral genes in non-neuronal tissues than in brain-related
tissues. The biological functions of the brain clusters correlated well with previous
findings on autism, such as synaptic signaling, regulation of DNA methylation, or
regulation of lymphocyte activation, however, on the other tissues they did not enrich
as significantly. Furthermore, ASD subjects with disruptive mutations in specific
gene clusters show phenotypical differences compared to other disruptive variants
carrying ASD individuals. Our results strengthen the omnigenic theory and can advance
our understanding of the genetic background of autism.