| Literature DB >> 22226452 |
Harumi Jyonouchi1, Lee Geng, Deanna L Streck, Gokce A Toruner.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There exists a small subset of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) characterized by fluctuating behavioral symptoms and cognitive skills following immune insults. Some of these children also exhibit specific polysaccharide antibody deficiency (SPAD), resulting in frequent infection caused by encapsulated organisms, and they often require supplemental intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) (ASD/SPAD). This study assessed whether these ASD/SPAD children have distinct immunological findings in comparison with ASD/non-SPAD or non-ASD/SPAD children. CASE DESCRIPTION: We describe 8 ASD/SPAD children with worsening behavioral symptoms/cognitive skills that are triggered by immune insults. These ASD/SPAD children exhibited delayed type food allergy (5/8), treatment-resistant seizure disorders (4/8), and chronic gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms (5/8) at high frequencies. Control subjects included ASD children without SPAD (N = 39), normal controls (N = 37), and non-ASD children with SPAD (N = 12). DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: We assessed their innate and adaptive immune responses, by measuring the production of pro-inflammatory and counter-regulatory cytokines by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in responses to agonists of toll like receptors (TLR), stimuli of innate immunity, and T cell stimulants. Transcription profiling of PB monocytes was also assessed. ASD/SPAD PBMCs produced less proinflammatory cytokines with agonists of TLR7/8 (IL-6, IL-23), TLR2/6 (IL-6), TLR4 (IL-12p40), and without stimuli (IL-1ß, IL-6, and TNF-α) than normal controls. In addition, cytokine production of ASD/SPAD PBMCs in response to T cell mitogens (IFN-γ, IL-17, and IL-12p40) and candida antigen (Ag) (IL-10, IL-12p40) were less than normal controls. ASD/non-SPAD PBMDs revealed similar results as normal controls, while non-ASD/SPAD PBMCs revealed lower production of IL-6, IL-10 and IL-23 with a TLR4 agonist. Only common features observed between ASD/SPAD and non-ASD/SPAD children is lower IL-10 production in the absence of stimuli. Transcription profiling of PB monocytes revealed over a 2-fold up (830 and 1250) and down (653 and 1235) regulation of genes in ASD/SPAD children, as compared to normal (N = 26) and ASD/non-SPAD (N = 29) controls, respectively. Enriched gene expression of TGFBR (p < 0.005), Notch (p < 0.01), and EGFR1 (p < 0.02) pathways was found in the ASD/SPAD monocytes as compared to ASD/non-SPAD controls.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22226452 PMCID: PMC3275444 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-9-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Demographics and clinical features of the ASD/SPAD children
| Case | Age1 (yr) | Race | Sex | Immuno-deficiency Diagnosis | Autism Diagnosis | Infection | Other co-morbidities and medications3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #14 | 13 | W | M | SPAD5 | Regressive autism | CRS, ROM | Chronic enterocolitis, asthma |
| #24 | 11 | W | M | SPAD | Regressive autism | CRS, ROM | Seizure disorder7, Chronic enterocolitis |
| #34 | 8 | W | M | SPAD | Regressive autism | CRS | Chronic enterocolitis, allergic rhiniconjunctivitis |
| #44 | 9 | W | M | SPAD | PDD-NOS (regressive) | ROM | Seizure disorder |
| #52,4 | 14 | W | F | SPAD | Regressive autism | CRS, ROM, | Seizure disorder, Chronic enterocolitis, asthma |
| #6 | 16 | W | M | SPAD | Regressive autism | CRS | Asthma, chronic enterocolitis |
| #7 | 7 | W | F | SPAD | PDD-NOS (regressive) | CRS, ROM | Seizure disorder |
| #8 | 6 | mixed | M | SPAD6 | Regressive autism | COM | guanfacine, risperidone, benzatropine |
1 Ages at the time of SPAD diagnosis. It should be noted that Case #1 and Case #2 were followed up in the clinic for 2-3 yrs prior to SPAD diagnosis but their initial laboratory values were not consistent with SPAD diagnosis. Their clinical features progressed over 2-3 yrs to fulfill the diagnosis of SPAD.
2 This patient developed anti-phospholipid syndrome 5 yrs after being treated with IVIG.
3 Co-morbidities present at the time of presentation and medications at the time of sample obtainment.
4 Positive history of food protein induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES)
5 Abbreviations used: COM (chronic otitis media), CRS (chronic rhinosinusitis), PDD-NOS (pervasive developmental disorder, not otherwise specified), ROM (recurrent otitis media), SPAD (specific polysaccharide deficiency), and W (Caucasians)
6 This patient also revealed low IgG levels but did not fall into the diagnostic criteria for common variable immunodeficiency; immunoglobulin levels of 2 isotypes are lower than two standard deviations of mean values of age-appropriate controls.
7 In Case #2 and Case #7, a main trigger of seizure activities has been respiratory infection. In Case#7, onset of seizure clusters were almost always triggered by respiratory infection prior to IVIG treatment. After implementation of IVIG treatment, no clinical seizures have been observed in case #2. In case #7, seizure activity appears to be not associated with infection any more after starting IVIG treatment and prophylaxis doses of azithromycin (3 times per week).
Summary of conventional immune workup results in ASD/SPAD children
| Case# | IgG1 (mg/dL) | IgA (mg/dL) | IgM (mg/dL) | Pneumococcal antibody titers2 | Isotype-switched memory B cells (cells/μl)3 | Total memory B cells (cells/μl) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | 545 | 23 | 96 | 0/14 | 7.6 | 19.6 |
| #2 | 844 | 116 | 190 | 0/14 | 8.3 | 13.2 |
| #3 | 680 | 35 | 23 | 0/14 | 6.1 | 15.1 |
| #4 | 767 | 34 | 59 | 1/14 | 5.4 | 25.0 |
| #5 | 578 | 121 | 136 | 0/14 | 2.7 | 2.9 |
| #6 | 783 | 40 | 107 | 0/14 | 21.9 | 31.0 |
| #7 | 700 | 38 | 29 | 2/14 | 8.0 | 40.8 |
| #8 | 442 | 44 | 66 | 2/14 | 1.9 | 19.0 |
1 Normal ranges of Ig levels (mg/dl) are for children of 6-8 yr (IgG; 572-1374, IgM; 30-208, IgA; 34-305) for children of 9-11 yr (IgG; 586-1496, IgM; 48-228, IgA; 45-305) and for children of 12-16 yr (IgG 759-1549, IgM; 35-239, IgA; 58-358).
2 Numbers of serotypes revealed > 1.0 μg/ml Ab levels among Streptococcus pneumonia 14 serotypes tested. Children > 5 yr is expected to reveal protective levels of Ab titers > 75% of 14 serotype.
3 Isotype switched memory B cell numbers identified as IgD-, CD27+, CD19+ cells and total memory B cell numbers (CD27+, CD19+ cells) were expressed as cell numbers/μl of peripheral blood.
4 Reference values of these parameters obtained from 27 normal controls (Age; 2-17 yr) in our laboratory are shown as a median (range).
Figure 1Cytokine production by PBMCs from ASD/SPAD, normal control, ASD/non-SPAD and non-ASD/SPAD children when stimulated by TLR agonists. IL-12p40/IL-10 production with TLR4 agonist (LPS) (Panel A), IL-6 production with TLR2/6 and 7/8 agonists or without a stimulus (Panel B), spontaneous production of TNF-α, IL-1ß, and IL-10 as well as IL-23 production with TLR4 and 7/8 agonists (Panel C), and IL-6 production with TLR4 agonist (Panel D) was shown. PBMCs (106 cells/ml) were incubated with TLR agonists as indicated overnight and cytokine levels in the culture supernatant were measured by ELISA. In Figs 1-2, the results of cytokine production with stimuli shown were those corrected by subtracting the levels of cytokines produced without a stimulus. *; lower than all the study groups (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Cytokine production by PBMCs from ASD/SPAD, normal control, ASD/non-SPAD and non-ASD/SPAD children when stimulated by mitogens (PHA or Con A) (Panel A) or candida Ag (Panels B and C). PBMCs (106 cells/ml) were incubated with T cell stimulants (PHA, Con A, and candida Ag) for 4 days and cytokine levels in the culture supernatant were measured by ELISA. Secondary to high production of TGF-ß without a stimulus, the production of TGF-ß is expressed as stimulation index (ratio of TGF-ß produced with candida Ag/background TGF-ß produced without a stimulus). *; lower than all the study groups (p < 0.05).
Figure 3Frequency of TGF-ß. PBMCs were stimulated overnight with either SEB or candida Ag as described in the materials and methods section. *; lower than all the study groups (p < 0.05).
Summary of transcription profiling results in ASD/SPAD children
| Numbers of genes1 | Vs. normal controls | Vs. ASD/non-SPAD controls | Overlapping in 2 control groups |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up-regulated | 830 | 1258 | 316 |
| Down-regulated | 653 | 1235 | 356 |
| Pathway analysis | Vs. normal controls | Vs. ASD/non-SPAD controls | |
| TGFBR | Not significant | P < 0.01 | |
| EGFR | Not significant | P < 0.02 | |
| NOTCH | Not significant | P < 0.005 | |
1 The number of genes > 2 fold up- or down-regulated in the ASD/SPAD children as compared to normal controls and ASD/non-SPAD children.