Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Special Issue: Keystone Symposia Reports
Contributing author and Project 8p Founder, Bina Shah
Abstract
Neurodevelopmental neuropsychiatric disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder and schizophrenia, have strong
genetic risk components, but the underlying mechanisms have proven difficult to decipher. Rare, high-risk variants
may offer an opportunity to delineate the biological mechanisms responsible more clearly for more common idiopathic diseases. Indeed, different rare variants can cause the same behavioral phenotype, demonstrating genetic heterogeneity, while the same rare variant can cause different behavioral phenotypes, demonstrating variable expressivity. These observations suggest convergent underlying biological and neurological mechanisms; identification of
these mechanisms may ultimately reveal new therapeutic targets. At the 2021 Keystone eSymposium “Neuropsychiatric and Neurodevelopmental Disorders: Harnessing Rare Variants” a panel of experts in the field described
significant progress in genomic discovery and human phenotyping and raised several consistent issues, including
the need for detailed natural history studies of rare disorders, the challenges in cohort recruitment, and the importance of viewing phenotypes as quantitative traits that are impacted by rare variants.
Author
Jennifer Cable,a Ryan H. Purcell,a Elise Robinson,Jacob A. S. Vorstman,
Wendy K. Chung, John N. Constantino, Stephan J. Sanders, Mustafa Sahin,
Ricardo E. Dolmetsch, Bina Maniar Shah, Audrey Thurm, Christa L. Martin,
Carrie E. Bearden, and Jennifer G. Mulle