Researchers have identified a novel genetic process that could one day provide a target for the treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders, such as intellectual disability and autism.
![New Genetic Pathway Behind Neurodevelopmental Disorders Discovered New Genetic Pathway Behind Neurodevelopmental Disorders Discovered](https://www.medindia.net/afp/images/Science-health-brain-music-150955.jpg)
People with neurodevelopmental disorders can experience difficulties with language, speech, learning, behaviour, motor skills and memory. Mutations in genes are thought to underlie many neurodevelopmental disorders, but all genes important for brain development found to date are in a single pathway. Genes are coded in DNA that gives way to RNA, which gives way to protein. Proteins form the functional unit of the body and are the major players in all biological activity. Prior to the current study, all genetic mutations important for neurodevelopmental disorders, occured in genes that make protein.
The work of Ernst and his research team identified an important shortcut in the process of making functional molecules for brain development. By sequencing the genomes of 200 people with neurodevelopmental disorders and chromosomal abnormalities, and comparing the results to more than 15,000 control samples, the researchers made a surprising discovery: some individuals had mutations in a gene that did not make protein. "Our discovery tells us that mutations in genes that code only for RNA and do not make protein can have a functional impact and lead to neurodevelopmental abnormalities," Ernst says. "In previous studies of brain development, RNA was just considered a middle player – one that only served as a template for the production of proteins. "By opening up a new area of study involving RNA, Ernst aims to advance understanding of the underlying causes of neurodevelopmental disorders. "We hope to shine a new light on how the brain develops," he says.
Source-Eurekalert