Convergence and Divergence of Rare Genetic Disorders on Brain Phenotypes: A Review
released
Title
Convergence and Divergence of Rare Genetic Disorders on Brain Phenotypes: A Review
Authors
Raznahan A, Won H, Glahn DC, Jacquemont S.
Abstract
Rare genetic disorders modulating gene expression-as exemplified by gene dosage disorders (GDDs)-represent a collectively common set of high-risk factors for neuropsychiatric illness. Research on GDDs is rapidly expanding because these variants have high effect sizes and a known genetic basis. Moreover, the prevalence of recurrent GDDs (encompassing aneuploidies and certain copy number variations) enables genetic-first phenotypic characterization of the same GDD across multiple individuals, thereby offering a unique window into genetic influences on the human brain and behavior. However, the rapid growth of GDD research has unveiled perplexing phenotypic convergences and divergences across genomic loci; while phenotypic profiles may be specifically associated with a genomic variant, individual behavioral and neuroimaging traits appear to be nonspecifically influenced by most GDDs.