| Literature DB >> 30483058 |
Heather K Hughes1,2, Emily Mills Ko1,2, Destanie Rose1,2, Paul Ashwood1,2.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are a group of heterogeneous neurological disorders that are highly variable and are clinically characterized by deficits in social interactions, communication, and stereotypical behaviors. Prevalence has risen from 1 in 10,000 in 1972 to 1 in 59 children in the United States in 2014. This rise in prevalence could be due in part to better diagnoses and awareness, however, these together cannot solely account for such a significant rise. While causative connections have not been proven in the majority of cases, many current studies focus on the combined effects of genetics and environment. Strikingly, a distinct picture of immune dysfunction has emerged and been supported by many independent studies over the past decade. Many players in the immune-ASD puzzle may be mechanistically contributing to pathogenesis of these disorders, including skewed cytokine responses, differences in total numbers and frequencies of immune cells and their subsets, neuroinflammation, and adaptive and innate immune dysfunction, as well as altered levels of immunoglobulin and the presence of autoantibodies which have been found in a substantial number of individuals with ASD. This review summarizes the latest research linking ASD, autoimmunity and immune dysfunction, and discusses evidence of a potential autoimmune component of ASD.Entities:
Keywords: autism; autoimmunity; behavior; dysregulation; immune; neurodevelopment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30483058 PMCID: PMC6242891 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Studies identifying association of familial autoimmunity and ASD.
| 61 ASD | Self-reported questionnaire: known AI within family | 46% ASD families had 2+ members with AI | Comi et al., |
| 101 ASD | Self-reported questionnaire: which 1st and 2nd degree relatives have AI | ↑ frequency of AI in ASD families compared to AI and TD families | Sweeten et al., |
| 79 ASD | Self-reported questionnaire: ASD with familial AI and psychiatric history | No significant relationship of AI in ASD vs. DD31.5% of ASD fathers vs 18.2% control had AINo difference found in mothers. | Micali et al., |
| 153 ASD | Telephone interview: AI in 1st and 2nd degree relatives. | ASD with regression ↑ in families with 1st or 2nd degree AI relatives | Molloy et al., |
| 111 ASD | Registry based: Danish national hospital registry | ↑ risk of ASD with maternal UC and paternal T1DMMothers with AI more likely to have child with ID (IQ < 50) | Mouridsen et al., |
| 3325 ASD (1089 “infantile autism”) | Registry based: all children born in Denmark 1993–2004 | ↑ risk of ASD with maternal RA and celiac disease | Atladottir et al., |
| 1227 ASD | Registry based: Three Swedish registries | ↑ risk of ASD with AI in both parents | Keil et al., |
| 967 ASD | Nested case–control design: prospectively drawn maternal sera samples with registry-based ASD diagnoses from FiPS-A | ↑ risk of ASD with maternal TPO-Ab presence during pregnancy | Brown et al., |
| 11 studies | Systematic review and meta-analysis | ↑ risk of ASD with family history of all AI | Wu et al., |
| 10 studies | Systematic review and meta-analysis | ↑ risk of ASD with maternal AI developed during pregnancy | Chen et al., |
| 206 ASD | Medical chart review of ASD diagnosis and familial AI association | ↑ risk of regressive ASD with familial AI | Scott et al., |
ASD, autism spectrum disorders; TD, typically developing; AI, autoimmunity; T1DM, Type 1 diabetes mellitus; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; C: SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; healthy control; BAP, broad autism phenotype; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; ID, intellectual disability; ITP, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura; FiPS-A, Finnish Prenatal Study of Autism; TPO-Ab, thyroid peroxidase antibody.
Studies identifying presence of anti-brain autoantibodies in mothers of children with ASD.
| Mother with 2 ASD children | IHC of sera binding to rodent brain. | Pilot study-maternal sera had reactivity to rodent Purkinje cells in cerebellum and large brain stem neurons. | Dalton et al., |
| 11 ASD mothers | Serum reactivity to prenatal, postnatal, and adult rat brain proteins by immunoblotting | ↑ reactivity to prenatal rat brain in multiple patterns of low kDa weight, and one significantly higher at 250 kDa | Zimmerman et al., |
| 100 ASD mothers | Serum reactivity to human and rodent fetal and adult brain tissues, GFAP, and MBP by immunoblotting | ↑ reactivity at 36 kDa in both human fetal and rodent embryonic brain tissue. | Singer et al., |
| 61 ASD mothers | Plasma reactivity to human fetal and adult brain proteins by immunoblotting | ↑reactivity to 73kDa and 37kDa to human fetal brain correlated with regressive ASD | Braunschweig et al., |
| 84 ASD mothers | Mid-pregnancy plasma reactivity to fetal brain protein by immunoblotting | ↑reactivity at 39 kDa in ASD compared to DD and TDReactivity at both 39 kDa and 73 kDa seen only in early-onset ASD | Croen et al., |
| 202 ASD mothers | PCR for MET rs1858830 allele genotyping. Measured MET protein and cytokines by Luminex from stimulated maternal PBMCs. Previous study results used for the associations to presence of auto-Abs | Presence of C allele associated with reactivity at 37 and 73-kDa to fetal brain proteins. | Heuer et al., |
| 277 ASD (70 BAP) | Maternal plasma reactivity to Rhesus macaque fetal brain protein medleys by immunoblotting, child plasma reactivity to Rhesus macaque cerebellum protein medley. | ↑ reactivity to many including proteins with MW of 42, 49, 60, 80, and 100 kDa in plasma from ASD mothersNo correlation with reactivity found in childrenChild results listed in Table | Goines P. et al., |
| 204 ASD mothers | Maternal plasma reactivity to Rhesus macaque brain at 3 gestational ages by immunoblotting | ↑ paired reactivity at 37 and 73 kDa combined in ASD, not seen in TD | Braunschweig et al., |
| 37 ASD and TD mothers and their children ages 3-13 years | IHC for plasma reactivity to rhesus macaque brain tissue. Immunoblot reactivity to fetal and adult rhesus macaque brain proteins. | Reactivity at 37 and 73 kDa or 39 and 73 kDa found only in ASD mothers | Rossi et al., |
| Preschool aged males: 131 ASD (10 with 37/73 kDa IgG+ mothers) 50 TD, all negative for auto-Abs | MRI scan (during sleep) to evaluate total brain volume and compare maternal auto-Ab positive group to maternal auto-Ab negative groups | ↑ abnormal brain enlargement in ASD, both groupsASD children with 37/73 kDa IgG+ mothers had more extreme abnormal brain enlargement compared to Ab negative ASD and TD groups, specifically in the frontal lobe. | Nordahl et al., |
| 246 ASD mothers | Plasma reactivity to fetal macaque brain verified by immunoblotting. Protein enrichment via PlasmPrep cell protein fractionation, 2-D electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. | 6 brain proteins that has plasma reactivity were identified: lactate dehydrogenase A and B (LDH), cypin, stress-induced phosphoprotein 1 (STIP1), collapsin response mediator proteins 1 and 2 (CRMP1, CRMP2) and Y-box-binding protein (YBX1)Reactivity to any alone or in combination significantly was associated with ASD outcome | Braunschweig et al., |
| 2431 ASD mothers, 653 controls of child-bearing age | Plasma IHC reactivity to mouse brain | ↑ presence of brain-reactive auto-Abs in ASD mothers compared to control women | Brimberg et al., |
| 333 ASD mothers | Child and mother plasma reactivity to Rhesus macaque brain tissue and human adult cerebellum by immune-blotting | Reactivity at 37, 39 and/or 73 kDa anti-brain auto-Abs associated with impaired language development, neurodevelopmental delay and sleep/wake cycle disturbances. | Piras et al., |
ASD, autism spectrum disorders; IHC, immunohistochemistry; TD, typically developing; kDa, kilodalton; GFAP, glial fibrillary acidic protein; MBP, myelin basic protein; DD, non-ASD developmentally delayed; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; BAP, broader diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder; IgG, immunoglobulin G; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; 2-D, two dimensional; auto-Abs, auto-antibodies; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; SIB, typically developing sibling.
Preclinical studies of maternal autoantibodies and ASD-like pathology.
| Sera from 1 ASD mother (auto-Ab+) and 4 TD mothers injected into pregnant MF1 mice at varied time points. Offspring behaviors and cerebellar chemistry measured with standard behavioral tests and MRS | ASD-sera exposed offspring exhibited: | Dalton et al., |
| ASD-IgG exposed offspring exhibited: | Martin et al., | |
| ASD-IgG exposed offspring exhibited: | Singer et al., | |
| ASD-IgG exposed offspring exhibited: | Braunschweig et al., | |
| ASD-IgG exposed offspring exhibited: | Bauman et al., | |
| ASD-IgG injected adult offspring exhibited: | Camacho et al., | |
| Brain from ASD-IgG injected embryos exhibited: Reactivity to RG cells (neural stem cells) in VZ | Martinez-Cerdeno et al., | |
| Adult brain from ASD-IgG injected embryos showed: | Ariza et al., | |
| Epitope-specific antibodies were successfully produced and persisted in dams through end of lactation MAR-ASD offspring exhibited: | Jones et al., |
ASD, autism spectrum disorder; autoAb, autoantibody; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; IgG, immunoglobulin G; TD, typically developing; IV, intravenous; GD, gestational day; IP, intraperitoneal; Iba1, Ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1; E13, embryonic day 13; BDNF, brain derived neurotrophic factor; IL-12, interleukin-12; IHC, immunohistochemistry; RG cells, radial glial cells; VZ, ventricular zone; SVZ, subventricular zone; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; STIP1, stress-induced phosphoprotein 1; CRMP1, collapsin response mediator protein 1; SC, subcutaneous.
Figure 1Maternal immune influences during gestation increase risk of ASD. Infection and immune-mediated/autoimmune disorders in the mother are known risk factors that increase the chances of a child developing ASD. These inflammatory factors as well as altered maternal microbiota may be contributing to increased inflammatory cytokines and/or autoantibodies that react to fetal brain tissue. These factors alter the immune profile and neurodevelopment of the child and are linked to behavioral abnormalities seen in ASD including repetitive behaviors, stereotypies, anxiety, and impaired social behaviors.
Figure 2Aberrant Immune Findings in Individuals with ASD. Evidence of immune dysfunction in ASD has grown substantially in recent years. Individuals with ASD commonly have immune-mediated comorbidities such as allergies and gastrointestinal (GI) dysfunction that may be contributing to the aberrant behaviors seen in ASD. Although research in this area is occasionally contradictory, the vast majority of immune studies in individuals with ASD have shown immune dysfunction and dysregulation. Several studies have found elevations in inflammatory cells and cytokines, both peripheral as well as within post-mortem brain tissue. A variety of autoantibodies targeting various tissues and cellular components throughout the body have been identified in subsets of subjects with ASD. Individuals with ASD also have fewer regulatory T cells.
Studies identifying presence of autoantibodies in individuals with ASD.
| 48 autism (5.9 ± 3.9 years) | Serum ELISA measurements of BDNF, IgG/IgM auto-Abs to BDNF, endothelial cells, MBP, and histones | ↑ BDNF in ASD, CDD compared to HC and NNI | Connolly et al., |
| 29 ASD (3–12 years) | Serum ELISA and Western blot reactivity to human brain | ↑ reactivity to 100 kDa epitope in caudate putamen and prefrontal cortex in ASD | Singer et al., |
| 63 ASD (2–15 years) | Western blot of plasma reactivity to adult human hypothalamus and thalamus protein extracts | ↑ reactivity to 52 kDA thalamus and hypothalamus proteins in ASD | Cabanlit et al., |
| 11 ASD | 72-h neuronal culture analyzed for effect of ASD sera on differentiation of NPCs by immunoblotting, morphometry, and immunocytochemistry | Treatment with ASD sera: | Mazur-Kolecka et al., |
| 33 ASD (7.3 ± 3.0 years) | Plasma ELISA and Western blot reactivity to MBP | ↑ auto-Abs to MBP found in regressive autism compared to classic (infantile) autism and Tourette syndrome subjects. | Libbey et al., |
| 63 ASD (2–15 years) | Western blot of plasma reactivity to human cerebellar protein extracts. Cerebellar-specific auto-Abs detected by IHC of | ↑auto-Abs to 52 kDa cerebellar protein in ASD | Wills et al., |
| 37 ASD (1–12 years) | Measured effect of ASD sera on cell response to oxidative stress via immunoblotting, morphology, immunofluorescence, apoptosis, and proliferation assays. | Oxidative stress reduced proliferation in differentiating NPCs treated with TD sera. Effect was not as prominent with ASD sera, indicating an altered response to oxidative stress. | Mazur-Kolecka et al., |
| 20 ASD (3.0 ± 0.4 years) | Taqman Real time PCR to detect serum mtDNA. Serum ELISA analysis to detect mtDNA antibodies | ↑ extracellular mtDNA in ASD | Zhang et al., |
| 277 ASD (70 BAP) | Western blot for child plasma reactivity to Rhesus macaque cerebellum protein medley | ↑auto-Abs to 45 kDa protein in ASD | Goines P. et al., |
| 54 ASD | Serum anti-ganglioside M1 Abs were measured by ELISA | ↑ antiganglioside M1 auto-Abs in ASD, especially in severe compared to mild or moderate autism. | Mostafa and Al-Ayadhi, |
| 86 ASD (2.0–5.6 years) | IHC for plasma reactivity to sections of macaque monkey brain (methods similar to Wills et al., | No differences in rate of plasma immunoreactivity to cerebellar Golgi neurons and other neural elements in ASD vs. TD, however immunoreactivity associated with worsening behavior and higher multiple CBCL scores. | Rossi et al., |
| 7 ASD with reactivity (2.5 to 7 years) | IHC: follow up of subgroup of ASD children from previous study (Wills et al., | Reactivity seen in previous study identified as GABAergic interneurons (based on co-localization of staining to calcium-binding proteins). Reactivity extended to other regions of the brain with slight preponderance to superficial layers of the cortex. | Wills et al., |
| 80 ASD | Indirect immunofluorescence used to measure serum anti-neuronal antibodies | ↑ anti-neuronal auto-Abs in ASD, associated with increased severity of autism and seen more frequently in females ASD (90 vs. 53.3%, | Mostafa and Al-Ayadhi, |
| 50 ASD | Serum ELISA measurements of 25-hydroxy vitamin D and anti-MAG autoAbs | ↓ 25-hydroxy vitamin D in ASD | Mostafa and Al-Ayadhi, |
| 54 ASD | Plasma ELISA measurements of anti-cardiolipin, anti-phosphoserine, and anti-β-glycoprotein 1 auto-Abs | ↑ auto-Abs to cardiolipin, phosphoserine, and β-glycoprotein 1 in ASD compared to TD and DD controls, significantly associated with worsening behaviors. | Careaga et al., |
| 42 ASD | Serum ELISA measurement of human anti-MBP Abs. Severity of ASD and manifestation of allergic/asthma symptoms compared to results. | ↑ auto-Abs to MBP and MAG in ASD, regardless of allergies. | Mostafa and Al-Ayadhi, |
| 93 ASD (2.9–17.4 years) | Patented process of identifying FRA: incubated serum with folate receptors then added radio-labeled folic acid. HPLC measurement of 5-MTHF in the CSF. | ↑ prevalence of FRA in ASD sera. Blocking FRA correlated with CSF 5-MTHF concentrations in 16 children. | Frye et al., |
| 75 ASD (2–22 years) | Patented process of identifying FRA: incubated serum with folate receptors then added radio-labeled folic acid. | ↑ prevalence of FRA in ASD vs. DD | Ramaekers et al., |
| 20 ASD (1.4–5 years) | Immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry to detect serum auto-Abs against differentiating NPCs | ↑ auto-Abs against human neuronal progenitor cell proteins of 55, 105, 150, and 210 kDa molecular weights in ASD subjects compared to controls. Strongest reactivity noted in NPCs expressing Tuj1. | Mazur-Kolecka et al., |
| 100 ASD | ELISA measurement of serum anti-ds-DNA Abs. Immunofluorescence measurement of serum antinuclear Abs. | ↑ anti-ds-DNA and anti-nuclear auto-Abs in ASD Presence of anti-ds-DNA auto-Abs positively associated with a family history of autoimmunity. | Mostafa et al., |
| 355 ASD | Western blot plasma reactivity to homogenized Rhesus macaque brain tissue and human adult cerebellum | Plasma reactivity at 45 and 62 kDa brain proteins associated with autism severity and larger head circumference. 45 kDa reactivity associated with cognitive impairment/lower VABS scores while 62 kDa reactivity associated with stereotypies. | Piras et al., |
| 60 ASD | ELISA measurement of serum anti-nucleosome-specific antibodies. | ↑ anti-nucleosome-specific auto-Abs in ASD, associated with family history of autoimmunity. | Al-Ayadhi and Mostafa, |
| 55 ASD (3–12 years) | ELISA measurement of plasma levels of anti-endothelial cell antibodies | ↑anti-endothelial cell auto-Abs in children with autism compared to healthy controls, associated with autism severity. | Bashir and Al-Ayadhi, |
| 62 ASD (4–11 years) | ELISA measurement of serum ENA-78 and anti-neuronal auto-antibodies | ↑ anti-neuronal auto-Abs in ASD ↑ENA-78 (neutrophil-recruiting chemokine CXCL5) associated with increases in anti-neuronal auto-Abs | Mostafa and Al-Ayadhi, |
| 40 ASD/FRAA-(7.0 ± 3.3 years) | Measured redox, methylation, vitamins and immune biomarkers using various assays and compared to behavioral assessments | ↓ 3-Chlorotyrosine (a marker of inflammation) was in those positive for blocking FRAs Presence of blocking FRAs in ASD associated with less severe ASD symptoms compared to ASD negative for these FRAs | Frye et al., |
ASD, autism spectrum disorders; CDD, childhood disintegrative disorder with regression after age 2 years; PDD-NOS, pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified; LKS, Landau-Kleffner syndrome; HC, healthy children; NNI, children with non-neurologic illnesses; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; MBP, myelin basic protein; SIB, typically-developing sibling; TD, typically developing child; kDa, kilodalton; DD, non-ASD developmentally delayed; NPCs, human neuronal progenitor cells; MEF, myelin-enriched fraction of the brain; AEF, axolemma-enriched fraction of the brain; IHC, immunohistochemistry; auto-Abs, autoantibodies; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; BAP, broader diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder; CBCL, The Child Behavior Checklist; MAG, myelin-associated glycoprotein; FRA, folate receptor antibodies; 5-MTHF, 5-methyltetrahydrofolate; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; Tuj1, neuron-specific Class III β-tubulin; ds-DNA, double-stranded DNA; VABS, Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales; ENA-78, Epithelial cell-derived neutrophil-activating peptide-78; CXCL5, C-X-C motif chemokine 5.
Figure 3Summary of Immune Evidence in ASD–is Immune Dysregulation Causing or Contributing to these Disorders? Immune findings in individuals with ASD have grown from a few scant early studies to a plethora of extensive and varied research showing immune dysfunction that contributes to worsening behaviors. Familial autoimmunity is a common finding within families affected by ASD. In addition, individuals with ASD have significant immune dysregulation that contribute to altered behaviors. These individuals also suffer more so than the general population from immune-mediated comorbidities such as allergies, asthma and gastrointestinal (GI) disturbances. Mechanistically, studies have shown that the gestational immune environment must be delicately balanced, and without such balance neurodevelopment can be altered. Whether these immune characteristics are causal or just sequelae of the overarching disorders remain to be determined; however, the evidence is building that the dysregulated immune response may be pathologically contributing to ASD.