Heritability of social behavioral phenotypes and preliminary associations with autism spectrum disorder risk genes in rhesus macaques: A whole exome sequencing study.

TitleHeritability of social behavioral phenotypes and preliminary associations with autism spectrum disorder risk genes in rhesus macaques: A whole exome sequencing study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsGunter, C, Harris, RA, Kovacs-Balint, Z, Raveendran, M, Michopoulos, V, Bachevalier, J, Raper, J, Sanchez, MM, Rogers, J
JournalAutism Res
Volume15
Issue3
Pagination447-463
Date Published2022 Mar
ISSN1939-3806
KeywordsAnimals, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Exome Sequencing, Humans, Macaca mulatta, Phenotype, Social Behavior
Abstract

Nonhuman primates and especially rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) have been indispensable animal models for studies of various aspects of neurobiology, developmental psychology, and other aspects of neuroscience. While remarkable progress has been made in our understanding of influences on atypical human social behavior, such as that observed in autism spectrum disorders (ASD), many significant questions remain. Improved understanding of the relationships among variation in specific genes and variation in expressed social behavior in a nonhuman primate would benefit efforts to investigate risk factors, developmental mechanisms, and potential therapies for behavioral disorders including ASD. To study genetic influences on key aspects of social behavior and interactions-individual competence and/or motivation for specific aspects of social behavior-we quantified individual variation in social interactions among juvenile rhesus macaques using both a standard macaque ethogram and a macaque-relevant modification of the human Social Responsiveness Scale. Our analyses demonstrate that various aspects of juvenile social behavior exhibit significant genetic heritability, with estimated quantitative genetic effects similar to that described for ASD in human children. We also performed exome sequencing and analyzed variants in 143 genes previously suggested to influence risk for human ASD. We find preliminary evidence for genetic association between specific variants and both individual behaviors and multi-behavioral factor scores. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration that spontaneous social behaviors performed by free-ranging juvenile rhesus macaques display significant genetic heritability and then to use exome sequencing data to examine potential macaque genetic associations in genes associated with human ASD.

DOI10.1002/aur.2675
Alternate JournalAutism Res
PubMed ID35092647
PubMed Central IDPMC8930433
Grant ListP50 MH100029 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
P51 OD011132 / OD / NIH HHS / United States
ZIA HG200411 / ImNIH / Intramural NIH HHS / United States

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