| Literature DB >> 26052415 |
Laurent Mottron1,2,3,4, Pauline Duret1,2,3,4,5, Lan Xiong3,4, Sophia Mueller6,7,8, Robert D Moore4,9,10, Baudouin Forgeot d'Arc1,2,3,4, Sebastien Jacquemont4,11,12.
Abstract
Several observations support the hypothesis that differences in synaptic and regional cerebral plasticity between the sexes account for the high ratio of males to females in autism. First, males are more susceptible than females to perturbations in genes involved in synaptic plasticity. Second, sex-related differences in non-autistic brain structure and function are observed in highly variable regions, namely, the heteromodal associative cortices, and overlap with structural particularities and enhanced activity of perceptual associative regions in autistic individuals. Finally, functional cortical reallocations following brain lesions in non-autistic adults (for example, traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis) are sex-dependent. Interactions between genetic sex and hormones may therefore result in higher synaptic and consecutively regional plasticity in perceptual brain areas in males than in females. The onset of autism may largely involve mutations altering synaptic plasticity that create a plastic reaction affecting the most variable and sexually dimorphic brain regions. The sex ratio bias in autism may arise because males have a lower threshold than females for the development of this plastic reaction following a genetic or environmental event.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum; Enhanced perceptual functioning; Male bias; Perceptual associative cortex; Regional plasticity; Sex ratio; Sexual dimorphism; Synaptic plasticity
Year: 2015 PMID: 26052415 PMCID: PMC4456778 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-015-0024-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Accounts of the enhanced plasticity hypothesis and extreme male brain theory to explain sex–related features in the autism spectrum
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| Sex ratio | For every female, four to ten males are identified with autism. | Males have a lower threshold than females for developing an enhanced plastic reaction to the same biological event. This reaction targets perceptual or language-related cerebral regions, resulting in autistic strength and social neglect. | Autism reflects ‘extreme expression of the (…) attributes of the male brain'; males require fewer biological changes than females to exhibit autism; strong empathy skills protect women against autistic social deficits. |
| IQ/sex ratio relationship | The excess of males increases with IQ. | Severe mutations leading to low IQ mask any sex-differences. In high functioning AS, mutations are less deleterious, preserving normal, sexually dimorphic plasticity. | Females with syndromic autism are easier to identify than those with high IQ autism because the social competence of women compensates for autistic social features. |
| Social & communication phenotype | AS males show more social and communication impairments than AS females. | Social symptoms result from the neglect of socially-guided behaviors caused by the domination of perceptual (AS individuals with SOD) or language (AS individuals without SOD)-guided behaviors, which are in turn favored by strong experience-dependent plasticity in males. | Social symptoms result from strong expression of the non-autistic male social behavioral phenotype, which is less driven toward the social domain than that of females. |
| RRBI phenotype | AS males show more RRBI than females. | Enhanced perceptual-functioning accounts for perception-based RRBI. | Some high-level RRBI are rule-based behaviors accounted for by extreme systematizing, a male strength. |
| Perceptual regions are more likely to be targeted by the enhanced plastic reaction in males than in females. | |||
| Non hormone-related genetic findings | Many genes involved in autism are related to synaptic plasticity, and some show sexually-dimorphic expression. | Synaptic plasticity is expressed through different mechanisms in males and females throughout life. The ‘genetic protective effect’ in females contributes to the small sex-ratio in low-IQ autism. | Genetic differences unrelated to hormonal effects are not accounted for by the EMB model. |
| Causative mutations are more likely to affect or trigger a plastic reaction in males than in females, because of the lower threshold of plasticity in males. | |||
| AS females and low-IQ males, but not high-IQ AS have a high incidence of DN LGD mutations. | Deleterious mutations disrupt plasticity resulting in a similar phenotype, mostly composed of ‘negative’ signs, in low IQ males and females. | ||
| Hormone-related genetic findings | A dozen sex-steroid pathway genes are associated with AS. | Sex steroids modulate plasticity mechanisms resulting from non-steroid related plasticity genes and thus can also be associated with autism. | Genetic alteration of the sex-steroid pathway modifies fetal androgens levels, causing hyper-masculinization of the autistic brain. |
| Brain structure | Autism-related differences overlap with sexually dimorphic structures. | Autism-related differences overlap with the most variable regions of the non-autistic brain. Differences in structure may reflect previous differences in plasticity mechanisms. | Altered brain structure in AS results from hyper-masculinization. |
| Brain connectivity | Connectivity patterns in AS resemble particularities of the brain network of non-autistic males. | Connectivity reflects the way networks were organized by plasticity mechanisms mainly during development. Loci of enhanced connectivity are determined by loci of enhanced variability in humans. | Connectivity pattern in autism results from hyper-masculinization of the brain networks. |
| Brain function | Autism-related differences overlap with sexually dimorphic patterns of activation. | Enhanced experience-dependent plasticity in associative perceptual (or language) regions, accounts for enhanced activity in autism. Given that these regions are among the most variable and plastic areas and underlie some of the most recent functions in evolution, they are likely to show group differences in activity like male/female or AS/non-AS dimorphisms. | Altered activations sometimes show the pattern females > males > AS or AS > males > females, reflecting hyper-masculinization of brain functions. |
| Cognition | Autistic strengths and non-autistic male strengths overlap. | This overlap is limited to some visuospatial tasks. Autistic strengths extend beyond male strengths, and manifest as enhanced perceptual functioning, even in domains where no clear male advantage is reported (for example, pitch). | AS individuals strongly express male cognitive strengths and weaknesses. |
| Scores in psychological tests show the following patterns: | |||
| Systemizing/Autism Quotients: AS > males > females | |||
| Empathy Quotient: | SQ/EQ/AQ tests are not sensitive enough to distinguish male/female differences from autism/control differences. | ||
| Females > males > AS | |||
| Behavioral phenotype | Autistic males present more social negative symptoms and positive repetitive symptoms. | Differences in male and female autistic phenotype result from sex differences in the target of the plastic reaction. | Phenotypic gender differences reflect the masculinization of autistic behavior. |
In some domains, the two hypotheses are not mutually exclusive and represent complementary views. References: the current review, [7] and [217]. AS: Autism Spectrum; CNV: Copy Number Variant; DN: De Novo; EMB: Extreme Male Brain; IQ: Intelligence Quotient; LGD: Likely Gene Disruptive; RRBI: Repetitive, Restrictive Behaviors and Interests; SNV Single Nucleotide Variant, SOD: Speech Onset Delay.
Figure 1Convergence between functional (A), structural (B, C), and connectivity (D) regions of interest in autism and regions of maximal variability (E) and sexual dimorphism (F) in typical individuals in a visual associative area (G). (A) Regions showing more activity in autistic individuals than in non-autistic controls when processing visual information. Qualitative meta-analysis, whole brain FDR corrected [16]. (B) Regions showing greater cortical gyrification in autistic individuals than in non-autistic individuals. The warmer the color, the greater the significance of the group differences [152]. (C) Regions showing higher thickness in autistic versus non-autistic individuals. More than 1,000 brains analyzed, FDR corrected [151]. (D) Regions of enhanced resting-state local connectivity density in autistic individuals. Warm colors show the regions with greater connectivity in the autistic individuals than in non-autistic individuals, and cool colors regions of lower connectivity [134]. (E) High inter-individual variability in resting-state functional connectivity in non-autistic individuals. Values above or below the global mean are displayed in warm and cool colors, respectively [17]. (F) Regions of higher resting-state functional connectivity in males (blue) and females (pink). Seed-based analysis on more than 1,000 brains corrected with Gaussian random-field theory [118]. (G) Bilateral visual associative cortex: Brodmann Areas 18 (green) and 19 (red).
Figure 2Topographical overlap between functional, structural, and connectomic particularities in the autistic left-hemisphere (A) and regions of high variability (B) and sexual dimorphism (C) in the general population in a visual associative area (D). Patterns of this schematic representation were obtained by manual alignment, distortion and superimposition of the results from the different relevant studies presented in Figure 1. (A) Overlap between two (light blue) or more (dark blue) autistic particularities out of four studies reporting higher thickness [151], gyrification [152], functional activity [16], and connectivity [134] in autism (left panel in Figure 1). (B) Overlap between the autism-specific region defined in A and regions of high inter-individual variability in connectivity ([17] and Figure 1E). (C) Overlap between the autism-specific region defined in A and regions of higher connectivity in males ([118] and Figure 1F). (D) Overlap between the region defined in C and the visual associative regions (Brodmann Areas 18 and 19, Figure 1G).