No autism is alike. This is also true of most mental disorders. «We now understand that each gene mutation has a specific effect, which adds to other effects to draw a unique picture of the disease in each patient," said Dr. Sébastien Jacquemont, a geneticist who sees on a daily basis children who are referred to him for a potential genetic diagnosis of mental disorder such as autism. To understand this additive effect, a precise quantification of the effect each identified mutation has in these patients is necessary. «We have just discovered, for example, that a missing copy of a region in chromosome 16 results in a
To reach these conclusions, the researchers measured the intelligence of 700 family members who had at least one relative carrying the same genetic mutation on chromosome 16, which is known to predispose to autistic spectrum disorders. Even in study participants whose IQ was considered to be normal, the researchers found a substantial 25 points IQ drop induced by 16p11.2 gene deletions. Indeed, it is quite common for mutation carriers to show no mental health problems.
«Intellectual faculties are the sum of many factors, the majority of which are genetic and inherited from parents. Each
Further studies are needed to quantify the effect of all mutations associated with autism and characterize the additive effects that lead to this psychiatric disorder. «No single mutation can cause the whole set of clinical signs shown by these patients," concludes the scientist.
Source: http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=160399&CultureCode=en