| Literature DB >> 32024554 |
C H Lew1, K M Groeniger1, K L Hanson1, D Cuevas2, D M Z Greiner2, B Hrvoj-Mihic1, U Bellugi3, C M Schumann4, K Semendeferi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Williams syndrome (WS) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are neurodevelopmental disorders that demonstrate overlapping genetic associations, dichotomous sociobehavioral phenotypes, and dichotomous pathological differences in neuronal distribution in key social brain areas, including the prefrontal cortex and the amygdala. The serotonergic system is critical to many processes underlying neurodevelopment and is additionally an important neuromodulator associated with behavioral variation. The amygdala is heavily innervated by serotonergic projections, suggesting that the serotonergic system is a significant mediator of neuronal activity. Disruptions to the serotonergic system, and atypical structure and function of the amygdala, are implicated in both WS and ASD.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32024554 PMCID: PMC7003328 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-019-0302-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Subject background
| Subject ID | Age at death | Diagnosis | Sex | Hemisphere | Cause of death | Postmortem interval (hours) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5183 | 107 days | Neurotypical | Male | Right | Sudden infant death syndrome | 13 |
| WS 7 | 114 days | Williams syndrome | Male | Right | Multiple organ failure | 30 |
| WS 10 | 17 years | Williams syndrome | Male | Right | Cardiac complications | 24 |
| 4916 | 19 years | Neurotypical | Male | Right | Drowning | 5 |
| H-10-01 | 20 years | Autism spectrum disorder | Male | Right | Motor vehicle accident | 24 |
| WS 15 | 25 years | Williams syndrome | Female | Right | Cardiac complications | 30 |
| H-11-02 | 27 years | Neurotypical | Male | Left | Cardiovascular disease | 16 |
| H-6-04 | 28 years | Autism spectrum disorder | Male | Left | Monoxide poisoning | 18 |
| WS 14 | 42 years | Williams syndrome | Female | Right | Cardiac complications | 18 |
| H-7-02 | 42 years | Autism spectrum disorder | Male | Right | Cardiac arrest | 24 |
| WS 9 | 43 years | Williams syndrome | Female | Right | Cardiac complications | 12 |
| 5758 | 43 years | Neurotypical | Female | Right | Sepsis | 22 |
| H-6-00 | 44 years | Autism spectrum disorder | Male | Left | Cardiovascular disease | 31 |
| H-19-01 | 44 years | Neurotypical | Male | Left | Unknown | 26 |
| H-1-01 | 44 years | Autism spectrum disorder | Male | Left | Pulmonary Embolism | 20 |
| WS 8 | 48 years | Williams syndrome | Male | Left | Respiratory illness | 30 |
| H-4-02 | 64 years | Autism spectrum disorder | Male | Right | Sepsis | 18.5 |
| H-11-98 | 67 years | Neurotypical | Male | Left | Unknown | ? |
| WS 13 | 69 years | Williams syndrome | Male | Right | Cardiac complications | 8 |
| 5943 | 69 years | Neurotypical | Male | Right | Acute coronary artery thrombosis | 23 |
Fig. 1Micrograph showing the four regions of interest in the amygdala in each diagnostic group. The first photo of each row shows the whole amygdala with boundaries of the lateral, basal, accessory basal, and central nuclei (scale bar = 5 mm). The remaining photos in each row show SERT-ir stained fibers in each nucleus examined at × 60 magnification (scale bar = 50 μm)
Mean SERT-ir axon density and standard deviation in micrometers (μm/μm3) in each nucleus of the amygdala in neurotypical, autism spectrum disorder, and Williams syndrome brains
| Diagnosis | Mean SERT-ir axon density and standard deviation (μm/μm3) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lateral | Basal | Accessory basal | Central | |
| Neurotypical (adults only) | 0.00368 ± 0.00101 | 0.00458 ± 0.00182 | 0.00572 ± 0.00270 | 0.00656 ± 0.00309 |
| Neurotypical (all subjects) | 0.00347 ± 0.0011 | 0.00437 ± 0.00175 | 0.00532 ± 0.00268 | 0.00615 ± 0.00302 |
| Autism spectrum disorder | 0.00501 ± 0.00174 | 0.00528 ± 0.00154 | 0.00581 ± 0.00088 | 0.00563 ± 0.00088 |
| Williams syndrome (adults only) | 0.00384 ± 0.00240 | 0.00432 ± 0.00296 | 0.00399 ± 0.00223 | 0.00504 ± 0.00268 |
| Williams syndrome (all subjects) | 0.00289 ± 0.00067 | 0.00314 ± 0.00071 | 0.00312 ± 0.00075 | 0.00418 ± 0.00188 |
Fig. 2Stereological estimates of SERT-ir axon density in the lateral, basal, accessory basal, and central nuclei of the amygdala of individual subjects in each diagnostic group
P values of NT compared to ASD, WS, and WS. Comparisons with ASD includes only the adult subjects in NT and WS due to lack of an infant age match in the ASD data set
| Comparison | Lateral | Basal | Accessory basal | Central |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NT vs ASD | 0.4684 | 0.8470 | > 0.9999 | > 0.9999 |
| NT vs WS | 0.4200 | 0.1950 | 0.0513 | 0.3460 |
| ASD vs WS | 0.0425* | 0.0466* | 0.0365* | 0.4693 |
* indicicates statistical significance p < 0.05
Fig. 3Mean SERT-ir axon density in the lateral, basal, accessory basal, and central nuclei of the amygdala in the adult subjects of each diagnostic group. The WS and NT adult means are overlaid by values of the WS and NT infant subjects (WS 7 and 5183, respectively) denoted by asterisks. Lines represent standard deviation of the mean. As observed in the figure, while WS and NT infant values are in the lower range of the adult values, they fall within the standard deviation of the adult mean
% difference of mean SERT-ir axon density in ASD and WS compared to NT in each nucleus of the amygdala
| Nucleus | ASD (%) | WS (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Lateral | + 36.1 | − 21.5 |
| Basal | + 15.3 | − 31.4 |
| Accessory basal | + 1.6 | − 45.5 |
| Central | − 14.2 | − 36.3 |