| Literature DB >> 24734177 |
Laura J Raymond1, Richard C Deth2, Nicholas V C Ralston1.
Abstract
Autism and autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are behaviorally defined, but the biochemical pathogenesis of the underlying disease process remains uncharacterized. Studies indicate that antioxidant status is diminished in autistic subjects, suggesting its pathology is associated with augmented production of oxidative species and/or compromised antioxidant metabolism. This suggests ASD may result from defects in the metabolism of cellular antioxidants which maintain intracellular redox status by quenching reactive oxygen species (ROS). Selenium-dependent enzymes (selenoenzymes) are important in maintaining intercellular reducing conditions, particularly in the brain. Selenoenzymes are a family of ~25 genetically unique proteins, several of which have roles in preventing and reversing oxidative damage in brain and endocrine tissues. Since the brain's high rate of oxygen consumption is accompanied by high ROS production, selenoenzyme activities are particularly important in this tissue. Because selenoenzymes can be irreversibly inhibited by many electrophiles, exposure to these organic and inorganic agents can diminish selenoenzyme-dependent antioxidant functions. This can impair brain development, particularly via the adverse influence of oxidative stress on epigenetic regulation. Here we review the physiological roles of selenoproteins in relation to potential biochemical mechanisms of ASD etiology and pathology.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24734177 PMCID: PMC3966422 DOI: 10.1155/2014/164938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1933
Glutathione and oxidative stress in autism.
| Authors (Reference) | Control | Autistic | GSH status | Additional related findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| James et al. [ | 33 | 20 | 46%↓ | ↓GSH/GSSG, ↓SAM/SAH, ↓cysteine |
| James et al. [ | 73 | 80 | 32%↓ | ↓GSH/GSSG, ↓SAM/SAH, ↓cysteine |
| D. A. Geier and M. R. Geier [ | Lab-based normal values | 10 | 36%↓ | ↓Cysteine |
| Adams et al. [ | 55 | 43 | 21%↓ | ↓SAM, ↓cysteine, ↓vitamin E, ↑FIGLU |
| Paşca et al. [ | 13 | 15 | 33%↓ | ↓Cysteine |
| Pastural et al. [ | 12 | 15 | 35%↓ | ↓Cysteine |
| Al-Gadani et al. [ | 30 | 30 | 27%↓ | ↑Lipid peroxides, ↓vitamin E, ↓SOD, ↓GPx |
| Melnyk et al. [ | 40 | 40 | 29%↓ | ↓GSH/GSSG, ↓SAM/SAH, ↓cysteine, ↓DNA methylation |
| James et al. [ | 42 | 40 | 28%↓ | ↓GSH/GSSG, ↓SAM/SAH, ↓cysteine |
| Geier et al. [ | 120 | 28 | 24%↓ | ↓Cysteine |
| Geier et al. [ | Lab-based normal values | 28 | 24%↓ | ↑GSSG, ↓cysteine, ↓taurine, ↓sulfate |
Figure 1Selenoprotein synthesis and activities are sensitive to elemental and organic electrophiles. High exposures to soft electrophiles may additively impair redox regulation and thyroid hormone production, disrupting epigenetic regulation and normal brain development.
| Selenoprotein | Functions | References |
|---|---|---|
| GPx1 | Detoxifies peroxides in aqueous compartment of cellular cytosol | [ |
| GPx2 | Expressed in cytosol of liver and tissues of the digestive system | [ |
| GPx3 | Synthesized primarily by kidney; secreted into plasma for transport to other tissues | [ |
| GPx4 | Prevents and reverses oxidative damage to lipids in brain and other tissues | [ |
| TRx1 | Reduces T(SH)2, vitamin C, polyphenols, and other substrates to regulate intercellular redox state | [ |
| TRx2 | Located in mitochondria and controls and regulates redox state | [ |
| TRx3 | Reduces mitochondrial glutathione disulfide, abundant in testes | [ |
| MsrB1 | Restores oxidatively damaged methionine (R-sulfoxides) to native configuration | [ |
| DIO1 | Converts T4 (thyroxine) prohormone into T3 (active thyroid hormone) | [ |
| DIO2 | Regulates thyroid hormone status, activating as well as inactivating T3 | [ |
| DIO3 | Activates thyroid hormone in brain, placenta, important in fetal development | [ |
| SPS2 | Creates the Se-phosphate precursor required for synthesis of all selenoproteins | [ |
| SelM | Notably high expression levels in the brain, possible thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase | [ |
| SelN | Interacts with ryanodine receptor, mutations result in congenital muscular dystrophy | [ |
| SelP | Transports Se in plasma (10 Sec/molecule) and delivers Se to brain and endocrine tissues | [ |
| SelW | Expressed in a variety of tissues and may regulate redox state of 14-3-3 proteins | [ |
| Sel15 | Oxidoreductase that may assist in disulfide formation and protein folding | [ |
Figure 2Selenoenzymes are central to providing antioxidant electrons to accomplish reduction of molecules in a number of biochemical processes. NADPH = nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; GR = glutathione reductase; T(SH)2 = reduced thioredoxin; GSH = reduced glutathione; TRx = thioredoxin reductase; GSSG = oxidized glutathione; TGR = thioredoxin-glutathione reductase; GPx = glutathione peroxidase; MsrB = methionine sulfoxide reductase; Prx = peroxiredoxin; Grx = glutaredoxin; e− = electron. Levels of plasma GSH, erythrocyte NADH, and NADPH are notably reduced (P < 0.001) in children with autism [16, 32].
Figure 3Depiction of potential etiologic contributors to disruptions of selenoenzyme physiology that may lead to disruptions of redox control and pathological consequences of autism and ASD. The factors and agents depicted are not all necessarily involved, but increases in predisposing factors along with additive contributions of increased exposures to thio- and selenoreactive electrophiles would be expected to increase the likelihood of progression to pathology.