A massively parallel reporter assay of MECP2 cis-regulatory elements reveals genetic candidates for male-biased autism

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Abstract

Autism affects males four times more often than females, yet the basis of this sex bias remains unclear. One hypothesis is that hypomorphic variants in X-linked genes—genes where loss-of-function alleles cause syndromic neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) predominantly in females—produce milder, non-syndromic phenotypes in hemizygous males. We tested this by investigating cis-regulatory elements (CREs) of MECP2 , a dosage-sensitive X-linked gene. Using a massively parallel reporter assay in human neurons, we mapped transcription factor binding sites within MECP2 CREs and tested autism-associated variants for functional impact. We identified two noncoding variants that change CRE activity, each with a male-biased phenotype. One of these, a promoter variant, disrupts NFY binding and reduces MECP2 expression by ∼30%, a magnitude that produces autism-like phenotypes in mice. These findings suggest noncoding MECP2 variants can cause non-syndromic, male-biased autism, and provide a framework for uncovering regulatory variants in other X-linked NDD genes that may contribute to autism’s missing heritability.

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