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Autism and the X chromosome: No linkage to...
Journal article

Autism and the X chromosome: No linkage to microsatellite loci detected using the affected sibling pair method

Abstract

The etiology of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) is poorly understood, although it is clear that genetic factors play a major role. ASDs appear to be a heterogeneous group of disorders, making genetic analysis difficult in the absence of etiologically definable subgroups. The excess of males in the affected population has led to suggestions that an X-linked locus could play a role in the causation of autism or a related pervasive developmental disorder. To examine this, we have investigated the genotypes of 31 families with two or more affected boys, at a series of 16 highly polymorphic loci distributed along the X chromosome with an average interlocus distance of 12 cM, in order to identify regions of significantly increased concordance among pairs of affected brothers. No locus tested showed a significant increase in concordance, supporting findings by others that there are no genes of major effect located on the X chromosome that contribute to increased susceptibility to ASD.

Authors

Schutz CK; Polley D; Robinson PD; Chalifoux M; Macciardi F; White BN; Holden JJA

Journal

American Journal of Medical Genetics, Vol. 109, No. 1, pp. 36–41

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

April 15, 2002

DOI

10.1002/ajmg.10138

ISSN

0148-7299
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