Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Andreas G Chiocchetti
Principal investigator Equal opportunity committee memberMolecular Genetics Laboratory, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, Goethe University Frankfurt
Professor Andreas G Chiocchetti is passionate about working with models to understand human behaviour and neurodiversity. Biotechnologist by training (Salzburg, Austria), Phd in Genetics, Research Fellow at UCLA, Los Angeles, ex Data-Scientist in Industry. Member of the Equal Opportunity and Diversity working group at the TRR379.
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Parsing Autism Heterogeneity: Transcriptomic Subgrouping of Imaging-Derived Phenotypes in Autism
Neurodevelopmental conditions, such as autism, are highly heterogeneous at both the mechanistic and phenotypic levels. Therefore, parsing heterogeneity is vital for uncovering underlying processes that could inform the development of targeted, personalized support. We aimed to parse heterogeneity in autism by identifying subgroups that converge at both the phenotypic and molecular levels. An imaging transcriptomics approach was used to link neuroanatomical imaging-derived phenotypes in autism to whole-brain gene expression signatures provided by the Allen Human Brain Atlas. Neuroimaging and clinical data of 359 autistic participants ages 6 to 30 years were provided by EU-AIMS (European Autism Interventions) LEAP (Longitudinal European Autism Project). Individuals were stratified using data-driven clustering techniques based on the correlation between brain phenotypes and transcriptomic profiles. The resulting subgroups were characterized on the clinical, neuroanatomical, and molecular levels. We identified 3 subgroups of autistic individuals based on the correlation between imaging-derived phenotypes and transcriptomic profiles that showed different clinical phenotypes. The individuals with the strongest transcriptomic associations with imaging-derived phenotypes showed the lowest level of symptom severity. The gene sets most characteristic for each subgroup were significantly enriched for genes previously implicated in autism etiology, including processes such as synaptic transmission and neuronal communication, and mapped onto different gene ontology categories. Autistic individuals can be subgrouped based on the transcriptomic signatures associated with their neuroanatomical fingerprints, which reveal subgroups that show differences in clinical measures. The study presents an analytical framework for linking neurodevelopmental and clinical diversity in autism to underlying molecular mechanisms, thus highlighting the need for personalized support strategies.
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