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Key Synaptic Pathology in Autism Spectrum Disorder: Genetic Mechanisms and Recent Advances

Yuan Zhang, Rui Tang, Zhimin Hu, Xihao Wang, Xia Gao, Tao Wang, Ming Xi Tang

2024Journal of Integrative Neuroscience23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impaired social interactions and verbal communication, accompanied by symptoms of restricted and repetitive patterns of behavior or interest. Over the past 30 years, the morbidity of ASD has increased in most areas of the world. Although the pathogenesis of ASD is not fully understood, it has been associated with over 1000 genes or genomic loci, indicating the importance and complexity of the genetic mechanisms involved. This review focuses on the synaptic pathology of ASD and particularly on genetic variants involved in synaptic structure and functions. These include SHANK, NLGN, NRXN, FMR1, and MECP2 as well as other potentially novel genes such as CHD8, CHD2, and SYNGAP1 that could be core elements in ASD pathogenesis. Here, we summarize several pathological pathways supporting the hypothesis that synaptic pathology caused by genetic mutations may be the pathogenic basis for ASD.

Topics & Concepts

Autism spectrum disorderNeuroscienceMECP2Heritability of autismNeurodevelopmental disorderAutismIntellectual disabilitySpectrum disorderPathogenesisPathologicalBiologyPsychologyGeneGeneticsMedicinePsychiatryPhenotypePathologyGenetics and Neurodevelopmental DisordersAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchMachine Learning in Bioinformatics