Yale team finds clues to origin of autism

Finding major new clues to the origins of autism, a Yale-led team of researchers has pinpointed which cell types and regions of the developing human brain are affected by gene mutations linked to autism. They report their findings in the Nov. 21 issue of the journal Cell.

Analyzing massive amounts of gene expression data generated by the BrainSpan project, the team identified common neural circuits affected by autism-risk genes and when, where, and in what cell types those genes exert their effects on the developing human brain and lead to autism spectrum disorders.

Although other genes and neural circuits that contribute to autism spectrum still remain to be found, the new findings suggest new targeted treatments for autism may be possible, said Nenad Sestan, professor of neurobiology, investigator for Kavli Institute for Neuroscience at Yale, and co-senior author of the paper.

“We know now that we may not have to treat the whole brain, that changes related to mutations in autism-risk genes may affect particular neural circuits at specific places at specific times,” Sestan said.

The genetic causes of autism, like other complex diseases such as schizophrenia, have proved daunting to study. Several hundred genes have already been linked to autism spectrum disorders, but no single gene seems to account for the symptoms of the disorders. The task of searching for a cause for the disorder is the scientific equivalent of trying to reach an unknown town in Maine knowing only that you started from a street in San Diego.

The Yale team led by Sestan and Matthew State, now at the University of California-San Francisco, together with James Noonan of Yale School of Medicine, Bernie Devlin of the University of Pittsburgh, and Kathryn Roeder of Carnegie-Mellon University tackled the difficulty by searching for molecular crossroads shared by nine genes conclusively linked to autism. An analysis of when and where nine of those autism genes are most co-activated identified at least two such molecular crossroads. The first influence a specific cell type - excitatory projection neurons - and their neural circuits, which form and become active about three to five months after conception. The second implicates the mid-fetal frontal cortex, a brain region critical for cognition, language, and complex motor behaviors.

The history of autism
Abstract Autism remains a fascinating condition, perhaps the most prolifically researched of all child psychiatric disorders. Its history yields many lessons: early accounts of possible autism are, with one exception, unclear; the greatest contributions to our understanding have come from individual clinicians and researchers; the concept and definition of the disorder have changed greatly over the years; some ideas once held with conviction, were later proved to be unfounded; and socio-political shifts as well as research findings have radically altered our understanding of the syndrome as well as the care and treatment offered to people with autism.

Changes in the concept and definition of the disorder over the years

Yale team finds clues to origin of aUtism Kanner defined autism narrowly and was dismayed by its widening “almost over night” to include children with isolated autistic symptoms on the basis of brain damage and mental retardation. Suddenly, in the 1950s, “the country was populated by a multitude of autistic children”. Moreover, in the 1950s and 1960s, especially in the US,schizophrenia was everywhere and in children it included autism . Schizophrenia was often held to be psychogenic and the psychoanalytic theories which then prevailed, often led to wasted and painful years of expensive psychotherapy for affected children and their parents.

As a result of Rutter’s and Kolvin’s studies in the 1960s and 1970s,the concept was again restricted only to widen once more in the 1980s.

This wider concept took off from Wing and Gould’s epidemiological study which was based on children with special educational needs and included many with brain syndromes and learning disabilities. From a therapeutic stand point, this was helpful because when such children have autistic features,they benefit from exactly the same educational and therapeutic methods as other children with autism. It was also helpful that the US Developmental Disability Act of 1975 included them along with other people with severe and chronic developmental disabilities and mental retardation,because of the similarities of their administrative needs for financial support and for special educational services.

In addition, Wing’s rediscovery of Asperger’s work   drew attention to high functioning autism with which Asperger syndrome, as currently defined, is often equated , and this culminated in the birth of the autistic spectrum which has been useful both clinically and as a basis for genetic and other studies.

More debatable is the widening of the concept to include exceptionally gifted people with Asperger syndrome, such as philosophers and mathematicians, for example, Wittgenstein and the Nobel prize winner, John Nash prior to his schizophrenic illness whose therapeutic needs, if any, are very different.

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Sula Wolff  FRCP, FRCPsych ()
38 Blacket Place
Edinburgh EH9 1RL, UK

Yale team finds clues to origin of aUtism It is unclear exactly how these mechanisms might lead to symptoms of autism, the authors noted. It could be that several developmental changes could influence how the disorders develop in the same way that hypertension contributes to both heart attack and stroke, they said.

Sestan also notes the same approach might be used to find causes of other complex psychiatric and neurological disorders, in which many genes contribute to a wide variety of symptoms that characterize the disease.

The Early Origins of Autism
Autism has been mystifying scientists for more than half a century. The complex behavioral disorder encompasses a wide variety of symptoms, most of which usually appear before a child turns three. Children with autism are unable to interpret the emotional states of others, failing to recognize anger, sorrow or manipulative intent. Their language skills are often limited, and they find it difficult to initiate or sustain conversations. They also frequently exhibit an intense preoccupation with a single subject, activity or gesture.

These behaviors can be incredibly debilitating. How can you be included in a typical classroom if you can’t be dissuaded from banging your head on your desk? How can you make friends if your overriding interest is in calendars? When children with autism also suffer from mental retardation - as most of them do - the prognosis is even worse. Intensive behavioral therapy improves the outcome for many patients, but their symptoms can make it impossible for them to live independently, even if they have normal IQs.

I became involved in the search for autism’s causes relatively recently - and almost by accident. As an embryologist, I previously focused on various birth defects of the brain. In 1994 I attended a remarkable presentation at a scientific conference on research into birth defects.

Two pediatric ophthalmologists, Marilyn T. Miller of the University of Illinois at Chicago and Kerstin Stromland of Goteborg University in Sweden, described a surprising outcome from a study investigating eye motility problems in victims of thalidomide, the morning-sickness drug that caused an epidemic of birth defects in the 1960s. The study’s subjects were adults who had been exposed to the drug while still in the womb. After examining these people, Miller and Stromland made an observation that had somehow eluded previous researchers: about five percent of the thalidomide victims had autism, which is about 30 times higher than the rate among the general population.

When I heard these results, I felt a shock of recognition, a feeling so powerful that I actually became dizzy and began to hyperventilate. In the effort to identify autism’s causes, researchers had long sought to pinpoint exactly when the disorder begins. Previous speculation had focused on late gestation or early postnatal life as the time of origin, but there was no evidence to back up either hypothesis. The connection with thalidomide suddenly threw a brilliant new light on the subject. It suggested that autism originates in the early weeks of pregnancy, when the embryo’s brain and the rest of its nervous system are just beginning to develop. Indeed, Miller and Stromland’s work convinced me that the mystery of autism could soon be solved.

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by Patricia M. Rodier
Scientific American

“The brain is extraordinarily complicated, but this approach gives us a way to pinpoint some of the mechanisms that contribute to a host of complex brain disorders,” Sestan said.

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Bill Hathaway
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203-432-1322
Yale University

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