4.5 Article

Family-based association study of ITGB3 in autism spectrum disorder and its endophenotypes

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 353-359

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2010.180

Keywords

autism; integrin-beta 3; quantitative trait locus; SLC6A4; serotonin; serotonin transporter

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry for University, Scientific Research and Technology [2006058195]
  2. Italian Ministry of Health [RFPS-2007-5-640174]
  3. Autism Speaks Foundation (Princeton, NJ)
  4. Autism Aid Onlus (Naples, Itay)
  5. Fondazione Gaetano and Mafalda Luce (Milan, Itay)

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The integrin-beta 3 gene (ITGB3), located on human chromosome 17q21.3, was previously identified as a quantitative trait locus (QTL) for 5-HT blood levels and has been implicated as a candidate gene for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). We performed a family-based association study in 281 simplex and 12 multiplex Caucasian families. ITGB3 haplotypes are significantly associated with autism (HBAT, global P=0.038). Haplotype H3 is largely over-transmitted to the affected offspring and doubles the risk of an ASD diagnosis (HBAT P=0.005; odds ratio (OR)=2.000), at the expense of haplotype H1, which is under-transmitted (HBAT P=0.018; OR=0.725). These two common haplotypes differ only at rs12603582 located in intron 11, which reaches a P-value of 0.072 in single-marker FBAT analyses. Interestingly, rs12603582 is strongly associated with pre-term delivery in our ASD patients (P-0.008). On the other hand, it is SNP rs2317385, located at the 5' end of the gene, that significantly affects 5-HT blood levels (Mann-Whitney U-test, P=0.001; multiple regression analysis, P=0.010). No gene-gene interaction between ITGB3 and SLC6A4 has been detected. In conclusion, we identify a significant association between a common ITGB3 haplotype and ASD. Distinct markers, located toward the 5' and 3' ends of the gene, seemingly modulate 5-HT blood levels and autism liability, respectively. Our results also raise interest into ITGB3 influences on feto-maternal immune interactions in autism. European Journal of Human Genetics (2011) 19, 353-359; doi:10.1038/ejhg.2010.180; published online 24 November 2010

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