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Review
.2009:60:367-80.
doi: 10.1146/annurev.med.60.053107.121225.

Advances in autism

Affiliations
Review

Advances in autism

Daniel H Geschwind. Annu Rev Med.2009.

Abstract

Autism is a common childhood neurodevelopmental disorder with strong genetic liability. It is not a unitary entity but a clinical syndrome, with variable deficits in social behavior and language, restrictive interests, and repetitive behaviors. Recent advances in the genetics of autism emphasize its etiological heterogeneity, with each genetic susceptibility locus accounting for only a small fraction of cases or having a small effect. Therefore, it is not surprising that no unifying structural or neuropathological features have been conclusively identified. Given the heterogeneity of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), approaches based on studying heritable components of the disorder, or endophenotypes, such as language or social cognition, provide promising avenues for genetic and neurobiological investigations. Early intensive behavioral and cognitive interventions are efficacious in many cases, but autism does not remit in the majority of children. Therefore, development of targeted therapies based on pathophysiologically and etiologically defined subtypes of ASD remains an important and achievable goal of current research.

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Figure 1
Figure 1
Autism heterogeneity in the context of common and rare genetic variation. Adapted from Reference a with permission. (a) Susceptibility to autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may in some cases reflect the contribution of normal variation in heritable, potentially distinct core components of autism (endophenotypes). Normal variations in language, social, and repetitive restrictive behaviors are illustrated as overlapping but distinct functions, with the green and red demarcating the highest level of functioning and progressive abnormality, respectively. Under such a scheme, moderate abnormality in all three areas is necessary for a diagnosis of autism, but abnormality in one area, e.g., language, leads to a more circumscribed condition, such as specific language impairment. Patients with Asperger syndrome would have normal language but lie in the red zone for the other two components. Each of these heritable cognitive-behavioral components, or endophenotypes, although genetically complex, is likely to be less heterogeneous than the syndrome of autism. These endophenotypes can be studied separately to increase power to detect common genetic risk variants. (b) A simplified model of how a variety of risk variants, large and small, may contribute to ASDs in aggregate. The contribution of genetic or environmental factors is emphasized by the size or position of each representative weight. Mendelian mutations, such as de novo copy number variations, are depicted as a large ball because they are considered causal in many cases and would tip the balance, placing an individual essentially in the red in all categories shown in panel (a) (pleiotropy), resulting in autism. It is also likely that in some cases, common variation would modulate such major gene effects on phenotype.
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