Daniel Moreno-De-Luca
Yale University
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Featured researches published by Daniel Moreno-De-Luca.
Neuron | 2011
Stephan J. Sanders; A. Gulhan Ercan-Sencicek; Vanessa Hus; Rui Luo; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Su H. Chu; Michael P. Moreau; Abha R. Gupta; Susanne Thomson; Christopher E. Mason; Kaya Bilguvar; Patrícia B. S. Celestino-Soper; Murim Choi; Emily L. Crawford; Lea K. Davis; Nicole R. Davis Wright; Rahul M. Dhodapkar; Michael DiCola; Nicholas M. DiLullo; Thomas V. Fernandez; Vikram Fielding-Singh; Daniel O. Fishman; Stephanie Frahm; Rouben Garagaloyan; Gerald Goh; Sindhuja Kammela; Lambertus Klei; Jennifer K. Lowe; Sabata C. Lund; Anna D. McGrew
We have undertaken a genome-wide analysis of rare copy-number variation (CNV) in 1124 autism spectrum disorder (ASD) families, each comprised of a single proband, unaffected parents, and, in most kindreds, an unaffected sibling. We find significant association of ASD with de novo duplications of 7q11.23, where the reciprocal deletion causes Williams-Beuren syndrome, characterized by a highly social personality. We identify rare recurrent de novo CNVs at five additional regions, including 16p13.2 (encompassing genes USP7 and C16orf72) and Cadherin 13, and implement a rigorous approach to evaluating the statistical significance of these observations. Overall, large de novo CNVs, particularly those encompassing multiple genes, confer substantial risks (OR = 5.6; CI = 2.6-12.0, p = 2.4 × 10(-7)). We estimate there are 130-234 ASD-related CNV regions in the human genome and present compelling evidence, based on cumulative data, for association of rare de novo events at 7q11.23, 15q11.2-13.1, 16p11.2, and Neurexin 1.
Neuron | 2015
Stephan J. Sanders; Xin He; A. Jeremy Willsey; A. Gulhan Ercan-Sencicek; Kaitlin E. Samocha; A. Ercument Cicek; Vanessa Hus Bal; Somer L. Bishop; Shan Dong; Arthur P. Goldberg; Cai Jinlu; John F. Keaney; Lambertus Klei; Jeffrey D. Mandell; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Christopher S. Poultney; Elise B. Robinson; Louw Smith; Tor Solli-Nowlan; Mack Y. Su; Nicole A. Teran; Michael F. Walker; Donna M. Werling; Arthur L. Beaudet; Rita M. Cantor; Eric Fombonne; Daniel H. Geschwind; Dorothy E. Grice; Catherine Lord; Jennifer K. Lowe
Analysis of de novo CNVs (dnCNVs) from the full Simons Simplex Collection (SSC) (N = 2,591 families) replicates prior findings of strong association with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and confirms six risk loci (1q21.1, 3q29, 7q11.23, 16p11.2, 15q11.2-13, and 22q11.2). The addition of published CNV data from the Autism Genome Project (AGP) and exome sequencing data from the SSC and the Autism Sequencing Consortium (ASC) shows that genes within small de novo deletions, but not within large dnCNVs, significantly overlap the high-effect risk genes identified by sequencing. Alternatively, large dnCNVs are found likely to contain multiple modest-effect risk genes. Overall, we find strong evidence that de novo mutations are associated with ASD apart from the risk for intellectual disability. Extending the transmission and de novo association test (TADA) to include small de novo deletions reveals 71 ASD risk loci, including 6 CNV regions (noted above) and 65 risk genes (FDR ≤ 0.1).
Genetics in Medicine | 2011
Erin B. Kaminsky; Vineith Kaul; Justin Paschall; Deanna M. Church; Brian Bunke; Dawn Kunig; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Andres Moreno-De-Luca; Jennifer G. Mulle; Stephen T. Warren; Gabriele Richard; John Compton; Amy E. Fuller; Troy J. Gliem; Shuwen Huang; Morag N. Collinson; Sarah J. Beal; Todd Ackley; Diane L. Pickering; Denae M. Golden; Emily Aston; Heidi Whitby; Shashirekha Shetty; Michael R. Rossi; M. Katharine Rudd; Sarah T. South; Arthur R. Brothman; Warren G. Sanger; Ramaswamy K. Iyer; John A. Crolla
Purpose: Copy number variants have emerged as a major cause of human disease such as autism and intellectual disabilities. Because copy number variants are common in normal individuals, determining the functional and clinical significance of rare copy number variants in patients remains challenging. The adoption of whole-genome chromosomal microarray analysis as a first-tier diagnostic test for individuals with unexplained developmental disabilities provides a unique opportunity to obtain large copy number variant datasets generated through routine patient care.Methods: A consortium of diagnostic laboratories was established (the International Standards for Cytogenomic Arrays consortium) to share copy number variant and phenotypic data in a central, public database. We present the largest copy number variant case-control study to date comprising 15,749 International Standards for Cytogenomic Arrays cases and 10,118 published controls, focusing our initial analysis on recurrent deletions and duplications involving 14 copy number variant regions.Results: Compared with controls, 14 deletions and seven duplications were significantly overrepresented in cases, providing a clinical diagnosis as pathogenic.Conclusion: Given the rapid expansion of clinical chromosomal microarray analysis testing, very large datasets will be available to determine the functional significance of increasingly rare copy number variants. This data will provide an evidence-based guide to clinicians across many disciplines involved in the diagnosis, management, and care of these patients and their families.
Molecular Autism | 2012
Lambertus Klei; Stephan J. Sanders; Vanessa Hus; Jennifer K. Lowe; A. Jeremy Willsey; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Eric Fombonne; Daniel H. Geschwind; Dorothy E. Grice; David H. Ledbetter; Catherine Lord; Shrikant Mane; Christa Lese Martin; Donna M. Martin; Eric M. Morrow; Christopher A. Walsh; Nadine M. Melhem; Pauline Chaste; James S. Sutcliffe; Matthew W. State; Edwin H. Cook; Kathryn Roeder; Bernie Devlin
BackgroundAutism spectrum disorders (ASD) are early onset neurodevelopmental syndromes typified by impairments in reciprocal social interaction and communication, accompanied by restricted and repetitive behaviors. While rare and especially de novo genetic variation are known to affect liability, whether common genetic polymorphism plays a substantial role is an open question and the relative contribution of genes and environment is contentious. It is probable that the relative contributions of rare and common variation, as well as environment, differs between ASD families having only a single affected individual (simplex) versus multiplex families who have two or more affected individuals.MethodsBy using quantitative genetics techniques and the contrast of ASD subjects to controls, we estimate what portion of liability can be explained by additive genetic effects, known as narrow-sense heritability. We evaluate relatives of ASD subjects using the same methods to evaluate the assumptions of the additive model and partition families by simplex/multiplex status to determine how heritability changes with status.ResultsBy analyzing common variation throughout the genome, we show that common genetic polymorphism exerts substantial additive genetic effects on ASD liability and that simplex/multiplex family status has an impact on the identified composition of that risk. As a fraction of the total variation in liability, the estimated narrow-sense heritability exceeds 60% for ASD individuals from multiplex families and is approximately 40% for simplex families. By analyzing parents, unaffected siblings and alleles not transmitted from parents to their affected children, we conclude that the data for simplex ASD families follow the expectation for additive models closely. The data from multiplex families deviate somewhat from an additive model, possibly due to parental assortative mating.ConclusionsOur results, when viewed in the context of results from genome-wide association studies, demonstrate that a myriad of common variants of very small effect impacts ASD liability.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010
Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Jennifer G. Mulle; Erin B. Kaminsky; Stephan J. Sanders; Scott M. Myers; Margaret P Adam; Amy T. Pakula; Nancy J. Eisenhauer; Kim Uhas; LuAnn Weik; Lisa Guy; Melanie Care; Chantal Morel; Charlotte Boni; Bonnie Anne Salbert; Ashadeep Chandrareddy; Laurie A. Demmer; Eva W.C. Chow; Urvashi Surti; Swaroop Aradhya; Diane L. Pickering; Denae M. Golden; Warren G. Sanger; Emily Aston; Arthur R. Brothman; Troy J. Gliem; Erik C. Thorland; Todd Ackley; Ram Iyer; Shuwen Huang
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and schizophrenia are neurodevelopmental disorders for which recent evidence indicates an important etiologic role for rare copy number variants (CNVs) and suggests common genetic mechanisms. We performed cytogenomic array analysis in a discovery sample of patients with neurodevelopmental disorders referred for clinical testing. We detected a recurrent 1.4 Mb deletion at 17q12, which harbors HNF1B, the gene responsible for renal cysts and diabetes syndrome (RCAD), in 18/15,749 patients, including several with ASD, but 0/4,519 controls. We identified additional shared phenotypic features among nine patients available for clinical assessment, including macrocephaly, characteristic facial features, renal anomalies, and neurocognitive impairments. In a large follow-up sample, the same deletion was identified in 2/1,182 ASD/neurocognitive impairment and in 4/6,340 schizophrenia patients, but in 0/47,929 controls (corrected p = 7.37 × 10⁻⁵). These data demonstrate that deletion 17q12 is a recurrent, pathogenic CNV that confers a very high risk for ASD and schizophrenia and show that one or more of the 15 genes in the deleted interval is dosage sensitive and essential for normal brain development and function. In addition, the phenotypic features of patients with this CNV are consistent with a contiguous gene syndrome that extends beyond RCAD, which is caused by HNF1B mutations only.
Lancet Neurology | 2013
Andres Moreno-De-Luca; Scott M. Myers; Thomas D. Challman; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; David W. Evans; David H. Ledbetter
Neurodevelopmental disorders can be caused by many different genetic abnormalities that are individually rare but collectively common. Specific genetic causes, including certain copy number variants and single-gene mutations, are shared among disorders that are thought to be clinically distinct. This evidence of variability in the clinical manifestations of individual genetic variants and sharing of genetic causes among clinically distinct brain disorders is consistent with the concept of developmental brain dysfunction, a term we use to describe the abnormal brain function underlying a group of neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders and to encompass a subset of various clinical diagnoses. Although many pathogenic genetic variants are currently thought to be variably penetrant, we hypothesise that when disorders encompassed by developmental brain dysfunction are considered as a group, the penetrance will approach 100%. The penetrance is also predicted to approach 100% when the phenotype being considered is a specific trait, such as intelligence or autistic-like social impairment, and the trait could be assessed using a continuous, quantitative measure to compare probands with non-carrier family members rather than a qualitative, dichotomous trait and comparing probands with the healthy population.
Biological Psychiatry | 2009
Christel Depienne; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Delphine Héron; Delphine Bouteiller; Aurélie Gennetier; Richard Delorme; Pauline Chaste; Jean-Pierre Siffroi; Sandra Chantot-Bastaraud; Baya Benyahia; Oriane Trouillard; Gudrun Nygren; Svenny Kopp; Maria Johansson; Maria Råstam; Lydie Burglen; Eric LeGuern; Alain Verloes; Marion Leboyer; Alexis Brice; Christopher Gillberg; Catalina Betancur
BACKGROUND Maternally derived duplications of the 15q11-q13 region are the most frequently reported chromosomal aberrations in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes, caused by 15q11-q13 deletions or abnormal methylation of imprinted genes, are also associated with ASD. However, the prevalence of these disorders in ASD is unknown. The aim of this study was to assess the frequency of 15q11-q13 rearrangements in a large sample of patients ascertained for ASD. METHODS A total of 522 patients belonging to 430 families were screened for deletions, duplications, and methylation abnormalities involving 15q11-q13 with multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA). RESULTS We identified four patients with 15q11-q13 abnormalities: a supernumerary chromosome 15, a paternal interstitial duplication, and two subjects with Angelman syndrome, one with a maternal deletion and the other with a paternal uniparental disomy. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that abnormalities of the 15q11-q13 region are a significant cause of ASD, accounting for approximately 1% of cases. Maternal interstitial 15q11-q13 duplications, previously reported to be present in 1% of patients with ASD, were not detected in our sample. Although paternal duplications of chromosome 15 remain phenotypically silent in the majority of patients, they can give rise to developmental delay and ASD in some subjects, suggesting that paternally expressed genes in this region can contribute to ASD, albeit with reduced penetrance compared with maternal duplications. These findings indicate that patients with ASD should be routinely screened for 15q genomic imbalances and methylation abnormalities and that MLPA is a reliable, rapid, and cost-effective method to perform this screening.
Molecular Psychiatry | 2013
Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Stephan J. Sanders; A J Willsey; Jennifer G. Mulle; Jennifer K. Lowe; Daniel H. Geschwind; Mathew W. State; Christa Lese Martin; David H. Ledbetter
Copy number variants (CNVs) have a major role in the etiology of autism spectrum disorders (ASD), and several of these have reached statistical significance in case–control analyses. Nevertheless, current ASD cohorts are not large enough to detect very rare CNVs that may be causative or contributory (that is, risk alleles). Here, we use a tiered approach, in which clinically significant CNVs are first identified in large clinical cohorts of neurodevelopmental disorders (including but not specific to ASD), after which these CNVs are then systematically identified within well-characterized ASD cohorts. We focused our initial analysis on 48 recurrent CNVs (segmental duplication-mediated ‘hotspots’) from 24 loci in 31 516 published clinical cases with neurodevelopmental disorders and 13 696 published controls, which yielded a total of 19 deletion CNVs and 11 duplication CNVs that reached statistical significance. We then investigated the overlap of these 30 CNVs in a combined sample of 3955 well-characterized ASD cases from three published studies. We identified 73 deleterious recurrent CNVs, including 36 deletions from 11 loci and 37 duplications from seven loci, for a frequency of 1 in 54; had we considered the ASD cohorts alone, only 58 CNVs from eight loci (24 deletions from three loci and 34 duplications from five loci) would have reached statistical significance. In conclusion, until there are sufficiently large ASD research cohorts with enough power to detect very rare causative or contributory CNVs, data from larger clinical cohorts can be used to infer the likely clinical significance of CNVs in ASD.
Nature | 2015
Tychele N. Turner; Kamal Sharma; Edwin C. Oh; Yangfan P. Liu; Ryan L. Collins; Maria X. Sosa; Dallas R. Auer; Harrison Brand; Stephan J. Sanders; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Vasyl Pihur; Teri Plona; Kristen Pike; Daniel R. Soppet; Michael W. Smith; Sau Wai Cheung; Christa Lese Martin; Matthew W. State; Michael E. Talkowski; Edwin H. Cook; Richard L. Huganir; Nicholas Katsanis; Aravinda Chakravarti
Autism is a multifactorial neurodevelopmental disorder affecting more males than females; consequently, under a multifactorial genetic hypothesis, females are affected only when they cross a higher biological threshold. We hypothesize that deleterious variants at conserved residues are enriched in severely affected patients arising from female-enriched multiplex families with severe disease, enhancing the detection of key autism genes in modest numbers of cases. Here we show the use of this strategy by identifying missense and dosage sequence variants in the gene encoding the adhesive junction-associated δ-catenin protein (CTNND2) in female-enriched multiplex families and demonstrating their loss-of-function effect by functional analyses in zebrafish embryos and cultured hippocampal neurons from wild-type and Ctnnd2 null mouse embryos. Finally, through gene expression and network analyses, we highlight a critical role for CTNND2 in neuronal development and an intimate connection to chromatin biology. Our data contribute to the understanding of the genetic architecture of autism and suggest that genetic analyses of phenotypic extremes, such as female-enriched multiplex families, are of innate value in multifactorial disorders.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2010
Christopher W. Carr; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Colette Parker; Holly H. Zimmerman; Nikki Ledbetter; Christa Lese Martin; William B. Dobyns; Omar A. Abdul-Rahman
Human FOXP2 deficiency has been identified as a cause of hereditary developmental verbal dyspraxia. Another member of the same gene family, FOXP1, has expression patterns that overlap with FOXP2 in some areas of the brain, and FOXP1 and FOXP2 have the ability to form heterodimers. These findings suggest the possibility that FOXP1 may also contribute to proper speech development. However, no such role of FOXP1 has been established to date. Recently, a child was reported who presented with a 3p13-14.1 deletion of four genes, including FOXP1, and a constellation of deficits that included speech delay. In this study, we report the case of a patient with a single deletion of FOXP1. This patient presented with speech and motor developmental delays, a Chiari I malformation, and epileptiform discharges. The nature of the speech deficit is different from the primary oromotor verbal dyspraxia found in patients with FOXP2 deficiency. The patients developmental deficits may support a role for FOXP1 in the development of verbal and motor skills.