| Literature DB >> 35817793 |
Chen-Chen Jiang1, Li-Shan Lin2, Sen Long3, Xiao-Yan Ke4, Kohji Fukunaga5, Ying-Mei Lu6, Feng Han7,8,9.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a prevalent and complex neurodevelopmental disorder which has strong genetic basis. Despite the rapidly rising incidence of autism, little is known about its aetiology, risk factors, and disease progression. There are currently neither validated biomarkers for diagnostic screening nor specific medication for autism. Over the last two decades, there have been remarkable advances in genetics, with hundreds of genes identified and validated as being associated with a high risk for autism. The convergence of neuroscience methods is becoming more widely recognized for its significance in elucidating the pathological mechanisms of autism. Efforts have been devoted to exploring the behavioural functions, key pathological mechanisms and potential treatments of autism. Here, as we highlight in this review, emerging evidence shows that signal transduction molecular events are involved in pathological processes such as transcription, translation, synaptic transmission, epigenetics and immunoinflammatory responses. This involvement has important implications for the discovery of precise molecular targets for autism. Moreover, we review recent insights into the mechanisms and clinical implications of signal transduction in autism from molecular, cellular, neural circuit, and neurobehavioural aspects. Finally, the challenges and future perspectives are discussed with regard to novel strategies predicated on the biological features of autism.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35817793 PMCID: PMC9273593 DOI: 10.1038/s41392-022-01081-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Signal Transduct Target Ther ISSN: 2059-3635
Fig. 1The milestone events associated with autism. Original description of autism was in 1940s, subsequently leading to a series of studies on the definition, diagnosis and treatment of autism in 1960s and 1970s. From the first twin study in 1977, people began to realize that autism as a common highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorder. Up to now, advances in WGS and WES have revealed patterns of inheritance and the types of genetic variation that result in ASD and studies in models have identified a mountain of evidence for molecular mechanisms for ASD. PDD pervasive developmental disorder, EEG electroencephalography, WGS whole gene sequencing, WES whole-exome sequencing
Fig. 2Genetic architecture of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). a The inheritance patterns of high-risk gene and syndromes associated with ASD. Major gene model includes autosomal recessive, autosomal dominant and X-linked inheritance patterns. The red stars indicate a causal allele. b The shown types of genetic variation including SNP and CNVs. Genes and syndrome that have been associated with ASD are also indicated. SNP single-nucleotide polymorphisms, CNV copy number variation. (Adapted with permission from reference[15])
Mouse models of ASD
| Target | Mice | Behaviour phenotypes | Molecular, cellular and circuit phenotypes | Mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nlgn | Reduced ultrasound vocalization Impaired social novelty preference Olfactory deficit Increased repetitive behaviour | Selective synapse impairment | [ | ||
Impaired social interactions Enhanced spatial learning abilities | Altered inhibitory synaptic transmission Altered excitatory synaptic transmission Enhanced the complexity of dendritic branching | Neuroligin dysfunction altered the E/I balance and synaptic transmission | [ | ||
Impaired social interactions and social memory Reduced ultrasound vocalization | Reduced brain volume | Loss of Nlgn-4 selectively impaired glycinergic synaptic transmission | [ | ||
| Nrxn | Increased repetitive grooming Deficient social behaviours Elevated anxiety Reduced nest building | Deficient excitatory synaptic strength Impaired PPI | Nrxn-1α deficiency reduced excitatory synaptic transmission and resulted in an E/I imbalance | [ | |
Deficient social interaction Increased anxiety-like behaviour | Reduced spontaneous transmitter release at excitatory synapses in the neocortex Impaired NMDAR function | E/I imbalance | [ | ||
| MeCP2 | Impaired motor coordination Increased anxiety Abnormal social behaviour Deficient contextual fear memory Breathing abnormalities | Reduced brain volume Enhanced PPI | Absence of MeCP2 | [ | |
Motor defects Stereotypies and seizures Impaired social behaviour Anxiety-like behaviour | Increased | Social approach deficits may be due to increased | [ | ||
| Shank3 | e4–9 KO | Repetitive grooming Deficits in learning and memory Abnormal ultrasound vocalizations | Decreased levels of Homer1b/c, GKAP and GluA1 at the PSD Decreased NMDA/AMPA ratio at excitatory synapses Deficits in LTP | Homozygous deletion of exons 4-9 induce loss of isoforms of Shank3 | [ |
Repetitive grooming Deficient social interaction | Altered PSD composition in the striatum Morphological defects of medium spiny neurons Reduced cortico-striatal synaptic transmission | Dysfunction of Nrxn/Nlgn/PSD95/SAPA-P/Shank complex | [ | ||
Impaired social behaviour Reduced ultrasound vocalization | Reduced basal neurotransmission | Shank3 deficiency influence AMPA receptor recruitment and synaptic development | [ | ||
Social deficits Repetitive behaviours | Diminished NMDAR synaptic function and synaptic distribution | Shank3 deficiency leads to the reduced expression of βPIX (GEF for Rac1), and Rac1/PAK/LIMK signalling | [ | ||
| InsG3680 | Impaired social interaction Repetitive self-grooming Increased levels of anxiety Impaired motor coordination | Severe striatal synaptic defects Altered PSD composition Much minor molecular defects at cortical synapses at P14 | Impaired synaptic transmission induced long-lasting alterations in striatal connectivity | [ | |
| Shank2 | Repetitive grooming Abnormal vocal and social behaviours | Reduced dendritic spines basal synaptic transmission Decreased frequency of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents enhanced NMDAR-mediated excitatory currents at the physiological level | Altered glutamatergic neurotransmission can lead to the core symptoms of ASD | [ | |
Impaired motor learning Abnormal social and repetitive behaviour | Decreased AMPAR in cerebellar synaptosomes Increased sIPSCs and spiking irregularity Impaired synaptic and intrinsic plasticity in PC | [ | |||
| Fmr1 | Deficient social behaviour | Elevated basal protein synthesis LTD is exaggerated downstream of an mGluR5 signalling pathway | The absence of FMRP leads to enhanced activity of mGluR5 signal transduction pathways | [ | |
| Tsc | Deficient social interaction | Hyperactivation of mTOR | Uninhibited mTOR signalling pathways | [ | |
| L7Cre; | Abnormal social interaction and vocalizations Increased repetitive behaviour | Decreased PC excitability | Overactivity of the mTOR signalling pathway | [ | |
| Deficient social interaction | Deficient spine pruning and cortical projection neurons Deficient autophagy | [ | |||
| Ube3a | Defective social interaction Impaired communication Increased repetitive stereotypic behaviour | Suppressed glutamatergic synaptic transmission | Increased E3A ubiquitin ligase gene dosage results in reduced excitatory synaptic transmission | [ | |
| Chd8 | Deficient social behaviour Communication difficulties Repetitive behaviour | Synaptic dysfunction within MSNs in the NAc Delayed neurodevelopment | Reduced expression of CHD8 is associated with abnormal activation of REST | [ | |
| Scn1 | Stereotyped behaviour Deficient social interaction Impaired context-dependent spatial memory | Decreased NMDAR synaptic function and synaptic distribution Decreased cortical actin filaments Insufficient NMDAR | [ | ||
| Syngap | Deficient social memory Tendency to social isolation | Dendritic spine synapses develop prematurely Premature spine maturation enhanced excitability | [ | ||
| Arid1b | Abnormal cognitive and social behaviour | Decreased number of cortical GABAergic interneurons Reduced proliferation of interneuron progenitors in the ganglionic eminence Imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory synapses | [ | ||
| Tbr1 | Impairment of social interaction, ultrasound vocalization, associative memory and cognitive flexibility | Defective axonal projections of amygdala neurons | [ | ||
| Pten | Deficient social behaviour Repetitive behaviour Lower circadian activity Impaired emotional learning | Brain overgrowth Abnormal immune system Altered cytoarchitecture and synaptic | Desynchronized growth in key cell types | [ | |
| Nse-cre; | Abnormal social interaction Heightened anxiety Decreased motor activity | Macrocephaly Neuronal hypertrophy Loss of neuronal polarity | Abnormal activation of the PI3K/AKT pathway in specific neuronal populations | [ | |
| NS- | Repetitive behaviour Deficient social behaviour | Decreased mGluR Increased phosphorylated fragile X mental retardation protein Decreased dendritic potassium channel Kv4.2 Decreased PSD-95 and SAP102 | Hyperactivation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway | [ | |
| Nestin-cre; | Impaired social interactions Increased seizure activity | Increased differentiation to the astrocytic lineage Stem/progenitor cells develop into hypertrophied neurons with abnormal polarity | Altered AKT/mTOR/GSK3β signalling pathway | [ | |
| En2 | Deficient social behaviour Deficient novel object recognition memory and spatial learning Increased depression-like behaviour | Deficient PPI | [ | ||
| Cntnap2 | Abnormal vocal communication Repetitive and restrictive behaviours Abnormal social interactions | Neuronal migration abnormalities Reduced number of interneurons Abnormal neuronal network activity Reduced cortical neuronal synchrony | [ | ||
| 15q11-13 | Deficient social interaction Behavioural inflexibility Abnormal ultrasound vocalizations Correlates of anxiety | Increased [Ca2+]i response to 5-HT2cR signalling | Increased MBII52 snoRNA within the duplicated region, affecting 5-HT2cR | [ | |
| 15q13.3 | Df (h15q13)/+ | Impairment in social interactions Restricted-repetitive behaviours Deficient communication | Enlarged brains and lateral ventricles Altered gamma-band EEG and ERPs | 15q13.3 microdeletion impair expression of | [ |
| 16p11.2 | df/+ dp/+ | Stereotypic motor behaviour | Increased numbers of Drd2 MSNs in the striatum Downregulation of DA signalling | 16p11.2 deletion induce ENK dysregulation | [ |
| 22q11 | Df (16)1/+ | Deficient hippocampus-dependent spatial memory | Enhanced short- and long-term synaptic plasticity at hippocampal CA3–CA1 synapses Altered calcium kinetics in CA3 presynaptic terminals upregulated SERCA2 | Presynaptic SERCA2 upregulation | [ |
| _ | (COX)-2− | Decreased motor activity Increased anxiety-linked behaviours Increased repetitive behaviours Deficient social behaviour | Altered expression of Decreased glyoxalase 1 expression | Altered COX2/PGE2 pathway change neuronal cell behaviour and differential expression of genes and proteins related to ASD | [ |
| _ | mice treated with VPA | Decreased social interaction | Chronic activation of glial in the hippocampus and the cerebellum Increased expression of TNF-α and IL-6 in the cerebellum Increased microglia density in the hippocampus | VPA-treatment led to decreased expression of PTEN and increased levels of p-AKT protein | [ |
| _ | BTBR T+ltpr3tf/J | Increased self-grooming Impaired social behaviour | Increased IgG and IgE in serum and IgG anti-brain antibodies Increased expression of cytokines in the brain Increased proportion of MHC-II-expressing microglia | Different autoimmune profile of BTBR mice is implicated in their aberrant behaviours | [ |
| _ | MIA | Deficient sociability Increased repetitive/stereotyped behaviour | Deficits in dendritic spine density, levels of synaptic proteins, synaptic transmission, LTP, and cortical malformations | Immune activation within the maternal compartment likely influences the developing fetal CNS through inflammatory mediators found in the blood and amniotic fluid of mothers | [ |
Nlgn neuroligin, Nrxn neurexin, PPI prepulse inhibition, E/I excitatory/inhibitory, NMDAR N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor, PSD postsynaptic density, HET heterozygous, LTP long-term potentiation, PAK p21-activated kinase, LIMK LIM-domain containing protein kinase, sIPSC spontaneous inhibitory postsynaptic currents, AMPA α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionic acid, PC Purkinje cell, LTD long-term synaptic depression, REST RE-1 silencing transcription factor, mGluR5 metabotropic glutamate receptor 5, ERPs event-related potentials, MSNs medium spiny neurons, SERCA2 sarco (endo) plasmic reticulum calcium-ATPase type 2, COX2 cyclooxygenase-1, PGE2 prostaglandin E2, VPA valproic acid, MIA maternal immune activation
iPSC models of ASD
| Target | Cell type | Molecular, cellular and circuit phenotypes | Mechanism | Targeting strategy | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NLGN4 | Neurons | Fails to enhance synapse formation | ΔE4 mutation in NLGN4 compromises the ability of NLGN4 to induce synaptic differentiation | _ | [ |
| NRXN1α | Neurons | Increased sodium currents, higher AP amplitude and accelerated depolarization time Altered neuronal excitability and non-synaptic function Depressed calcium-signalling activity Impaired maturation of excitatory neurons | NRXN1α deletions can lead to neuronal hyper-excitability Deletion of NRXN1α lead to skewed differentiation of NES cells into immature and inhibitory neurons | _ | [ |
| MECP2 | Neurons | Reduced synapses and spine density, smaller soma size Altered calcium signalling and deficient electrophysiological | Altered excitatory synaptic strength may underlie global network changes in RTT | IGF1 Gentamicin | [ |
| NPCs | Increased miR-199 and miR-214 Delayed GABA functional switch | miR-199 and miR-214 regulate extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK/MAPK) and protein kinase B (PKB/AKT) signalling Delayed GABA functional switch due to deficit in neuron-specific KCC2 expression | Overexpression mi-199 and miR-214 Restoring KCC2 level | [ | |
| Astrocytes | Shorter total neurite length Decreased terminal ends | Loss of MeCP2 in astrocytes contributes to neuronal abnormalities MECP2 deficiency in neurons induces cell-autonomous dysfunctions | IGF-1 GPE | [ | |
| MECP2dup | Neurons | Increased synaptogenesis and dendritic complexity Altered neuronal network synchronization | MECP2 overexpression promotes early postnatal dendritic and synaptic growth | NCH-51 histone deacetylase inhibitor | [ |
| SHANK3 | Neurons | Altered morphologies of dendritic spines from pyramidal neurons Impaired both early stage of neuronal development and mature neuronal function Smaller cell bodies, more extensively branched neurites, reduced motility | Deficient excitatory synaptic transmission Lack of SHANK3 during early neuronal development may impair the structural integrity of neurons and lead to synaptic defects in later mature neurons | Rescued by transduction with a Shank3 expression construct | [ |
| SHANK2 | Neurons | Increased dendrite length, dendrite complexity, synapse number, and frequency of sEPSC | SHANK2 haploinsufficiency disrupts the complex interaction between synaptic formation and dendritic formation | Rescued by gene correction of an ASD SHANK2 mutation | [ |
| FMR1 | Neurons | Decreased expression of PSD95 Decreased synaptic puncta density, neurite length Higher amplitude and increased frequency of calcium transients Abolished homoeostatic synaptic plasticity | FMR1 inactivation impaired homoeostatic plasticity by blocking retinoic acid-mediated regulation of synaptic strength | Repairing the genetic mutation in the | [ |
| iPSCs | Altered cell fate commitment and cell cycle Cell-type-specific translational dysregulation Abnormal proliferation Increased protein synthesis | Hyperactive PI3K activity due to lack of FMRP may associated with deficient protein synthesis and proliferation | Inhibition of PI3K signalling | [ | |
| TSC2 | NPCs | Increased proliferative activity and PAX6 expression Neurons differentiated showed abnormal morphology Increased saturation density and higher proliferative activity of astrocytes Slow differentiated into neurons | Enhanced mTOR pathway Reduced PI3K/AKT signalling and IRS1 expression | _ | [ |
| Neurons | Increased cell body size and process outgrowth | mTORC1 hyperactivation | Rapamycin | [ | |
| UBE3A | Neurons | Impaired maturation of RMP and AP firing Decreased synaptic activity and synaptic plasticity | Changes in RMP may be directly related to UBE3A loss and AP and synaptic changes may be secondary effects | Pharmacologically unsilencing paternal | [ |
| CHD8+/− | Cortical organoids | Increased expression of | CHD8 affects GABAergic interneuron development, by modulating DLX gene expression | _ | [ |
| SYNGAP1 | Neurons | Enhanced dendritic morphogenesis Stronger excitatory synapses and expressed synaptic activity earlier in development | SYNGAP1 regulates the postmitotic maturation of human neurons made from hiPSCs, which influences how activity develops within nascent neural networks | _ | [ |
CDKL5 NTNG1 | Neurons | Abnormal dendritic spines | CDKL5 contributes to correct dendritic spine structure and synapse activity CDKL5-dependent phosphorylation on S631 controls the association of NGL-1 with the postsynaptic molecular hub PSD95 | _ | [ |
| RELN | NPCs | Decreased Reelin secretion Impaired Reelin–DAB1 signal transduction | Overactivation of the mTORC1 pathway contributes to the downregulation of the Reelin–DAB1 cascade | Rapamycin | [ |
| CNTNAP2 | Cortical organoids | Increase in volume and total cell number | Homozygous c.3709DelG mutation in | Site-specific repair of c.3709DelG mutation using CRISPR-Cas | [ |
| FOXG1 | Neurons | Accelerated cell cycle Overproduction of GABAergic inhibitory neurons | Changed fate of GABAergic neurons induced by FOXG1 | _ | [ |
| TRPC6 | Neurons | Shortening of neurites Reduced dendritic spine density | MeCP2 levels affect | TRPC6 complementation IGF1 Hyperforin | [ |
| CACNA1C | Neurons | Deficient Ca2+ signalling Abnormal differentiation Abnormal expression of tyrosine hydroxylase Increased synthesis of norepinephrine and dopamine Activity-dependent dendrite retraction Abnormal migratory of interneurons | Ca(v)1.2 regulates the differentiation of cortical neurons in humans Ectopic activation of RhoA and inhibition by overexpressed channel-associated GTPase Gem | Roscovitine Pharmacologically manipulate LTCC | [ |
CNTN5 EHMT2 | Neurons | Enhanced excitatory neuron synaptic activity | EHMT2 impacts the synaptic function of glutamatergic neurons through H3K9me1/2 catalyzing ability | _ | [ |
| 15q11-q13 | Neurons | Increased excitatory synaptic event frequency amplitude, density of dendritic protrusions, AP firing Decreased inhibitory synaptic transmission Impaired activity-dependent synaptic plasticity and homoeostatic synaptic scaling | Altered expression of UBE3A and other several genes in this region | Restoring normal UBE3A expression levels | [ |
| 15q13.3 | Neurons | Increased endoplasmic reticulum stress Dysregulated neuronal gene expression Increased AP firing and elevated cholinergic activity Increased homomeric CHRNA7 channel activity | Common functional anomalies may be conferred by CHRNA7 duplication | Ryanodine receptor antagonist JTV-519 Wnt signalling agonist | [ |
| 16p11.2 | Neurons | Increased soma size and dendrite length in 16pdel neurons Decreased neuronal size and dendrite length in 16pdup neurons Decreased synaptic density | Changes of the 16p11.2 region may influence genes encoding proteins that interact with the PI3K/AKT or Ras/MAPK pathway | _ | [ |
| 22q11.2 | Cortical organoids | Deficient spontaneous neuronal activity and calcium signalling Downregulated expression of miR-1290 | Changed expression of DGCR8 | Raclopride, Sulpiride, Olanzapine DGCR8 overexpression Overexpression miR-1290 | [ |
| 22q13.3 | Neurons | Reduced SHANK3 expression Deficient excitatory synaptic transmission | Loss of SHANK3 | Restoring SHANK3 expression IGF-1 | [ |
| _ | Neurons | Increased cell proliferation Abnormal neurogenesis Decreased synaptogenesis | Dysregulation of a β-catenin/BRN2 transcriptional cascade | IGF-1 | [ |
| _ | Neurons | Decreased expression and protein levels of synaptic gene Decreased glutamate neurotransmitter release Reduced spontaneous firing rate | IL-6 secretion from astrocytes as a possible culprit for neural defects | Blocking IL-6 levels | [ |
iPSC induced pluripotent stem cell, AP action potential, NES cells neuroepithelial stem cells, RTT Rett syndrome, IGF1 Insulin-like growth factor 1, NPCs neural precursor cells, KCC2 K(+)-Cl(−) cotransporter2, sEPSC spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents, PSD95 postsynaptic density 95, vGLUT1 vesicular glutamate transporter 1, RMP resting membrane potential, LTCC L-type calcium channels, IL-6 interleukin-6, TS Timothy syndrome
Fig. 3Transcription factors and translation mechanism associated with ASD. Activity-regulated translational pathways including the Ras/ERK and PI3K/mTOR. Both of them could be activated upon the stimulation of TrKB. Activation of L-type voltage-sensitive calcium channels (L-VSCCs) triggers calcium influx, induction of calcium-dependent signalling molecules and Ras/ERK pathways, involving in transcriptional regulation. These signalling cascades transcription regulators in the nucleus lead to the expression of transcription factors, thereby contributing to the regulation of activity-dependent gene transcription. Mutations of proteins involved in transcriptional regulation are associated with some syndromes of ASD, including L-VSCC in Timothy syndrome, MeCP2 in Rett syndrome and UBE3A in Angleman syndrome. Mutations of proteins involved in translation regulation including PTEN, ADNP, EN2, TSC1/TSC2 (tuberous sclerosis) and FMRP (fragile X syndrome). These genes have been highlighted in red
Fig. 4Molecular pathways implicated in synaptic function for ASD. At the excitatory synapse, encoded proteins including synaptic scaffold proteins (for example, SHANKs), neurotransmitter receptors (for example, NMDARs, AMPARs and mGluRs) and cell adhesion molecules (NRXNs and NLGNs) associated with autism risk genes. Activation of cell surface receptors is closely linked to activation of the Ras/ERK and PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathways. In addition, mutations in ion channels, such as L-VSCCs and sodium channel protein type 1 subunit-α (SCN1A), both of which have been illuminated result in synaptic dysfunction and autism-like behaviour
Fig. 5The epigenetic network associated with ASD pathophysiology. a Despite the exceptions, DNA methylation usually leads to transcriptional repression or even silencing of the affected gene. MeCP2 binds to methylated CpG sites in gene promoters and associates with chromatin silencing complexes, thereby suppressing gene expression. b Histone modification and chromatin remodelling cause transcriptional activation or inactivation, and chromatin packaging. c Non-coding RNAs control the expression of genes at the level of post-transcription by blocking protein synesis or inducing mRNA degradation
Fig. 6Mechanisms underlying the effects of microbiota, immunology and neuroinflammation on ASD. In periphery, microbiome and immune disorders in individuals with autism can lead to the change of peripheral immune environment. In the brain, abnormal proliferation and activation of glial cells can induce the secretion of cytokines and may cause vascular-endothelial dysfunction. Disorders in the periphery and brain all can affect brain functional connections and density of dendritic spines. Alterations in expression of immune mediators in the brain and at synapse, including cytokines and MHCI molecules. Notably, glutamate and cytokine receptors downstream signalling may converge upon the mTORC1 pathway, further regulating translation, synapse formation and plasticity. MHCI major histocompatibility complex class I molecules, mTORC1 mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1
Fig. 7Social behaviour-related neural circuits, neurotransmitter system and E/I balance in the rodent brain associated with ASD. a A sagittal view of the rodent brain used to illustrate the local and distal circuits implicated in social behaviours. Recent studies use behavioural neuroscience, optogenetics, chemical genetics and electrophysiology have illuminated the relationships between various social behaviour and the activity of specific neural circuits. Alterations in brain connectivity usually accompany changes of neurotransmitter, including glutamate, GABA, oxytocin, serotonin and dopamine. b In addition, the hypothesis of disruption of cortical “E/I imbalance” in autism is widely accepted, which has also been highlighted in the figure. AMY amygdala, AOB olfactory bulb, BNST bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, DRN dorsal raphe nucleus, LS lateral septum, MOB main olfactory bulb, MOE main olfactory epithelium, NAc nucleus accumbens, PFC prefrontal cortex, PVN paraventricular nucleus, RCrusl right Crus I, VNO vomeronasal organ, VTA ventral tegmental area
Fig. 8Potential novel therapeutic strategies and target of ASD. Abundant basic research on mouse and iPSC models exploited potential treatments to be used in ASD patients.It is noteworthy that emerging treatments including brain stimulation, gene therapy and exosome modulators are also been indicated
Potential drugs under study
| Drug | Pharmacological target | Improvement of symptoms | Clinical therapeutic effects | Adverse effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guanfacine | Selective α2A adrenergic receptor agonist | Oppositional behaviour Anxiety Repetitive behaviour Sleep disturbance | Improved oppositional behaviour Significantly improved repetitive behaviour on the CYBOCS Effective in reducing oppositional behaviour Slightly improved repetitive behaviour | Drowsiness, fatigue, irritability decreased appetite | [ |
| Melatonin | MT1R agonist | Sleep disorders | Effective in reducing insomnia symptoms | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Clonidine | α2-adrenergic receptor agonist | ASD relevant behaviour | Reducing sleep initiation latency and night awakening, slightly improve attention deficits hyperactivity, mood instability and aggressiveness | Sedation, dizziness or mild depression | [ |
| Memantine | Non-competitive NMDAR antagonist | Social impairment | Significant improvement on the CGI-I and CGI-S | Increased seizures, irritability, emesis and sedation | [ |
Language impairment ASD relevant behaviour Self-stimulatory behaviours | Significantly improve language function, social behaviour, and self-stimulatory behaviours | No serious AEs reported | [ | ||
| Cognitive, behavioural, and memory dysfunction | Significant improvement on CMSDLS and ABC subscales including hyperactivity, lethargy, and irritability Minimal improvement on CGI-I | No serious AEs reported | [ | ||
| D-cycloserine | Partial agonist of NMDA glutamate receptor | ASD relevant behaviours | Significant improvement on the CGI and social withdrawal subscale of the ABC | Transient motor tic and increased echolalia | [ |
| Baclofen | Selective GABA-B agonist | Irritability | Significant improvement for all the ABC subscales Greater effect on improvement of hyperactivity symptoms | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Arbaclofen | Selective GABA-B agonist | ASD relevant behaviours | Improvement on ABC-I, LSW, SRS, CY-BOCS-PDD, and CGI | Agitation and irritability | [ |
| Bumetanide | Selective NKCC1 antagonist | Neurophysiological, cognitive, and behavioural measures | Significant improvement in irritable behaviour, social behaviour and hyperactive behaviour | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Core symptoms of ASD | Significant improvement in symptom severity | Polyuria, mild hypokalemia, loss of appetite, fatigue, mild hyperuricemia | [ | ||
| IGF-1 | IGF-1R receptor agonist | Core deficits of ASD | Significant improvement in social impairment and restrictive behaviours | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Folate | Vitamin B | Language impairment | Improvements in subscales of the VABS, the ABC, the ASQ and the BASC for Children | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Oxytocin | Biological peptides | Repetitive behaviour Social deficits | Significantly reduce repetitive behaviours Improvements in affective speech comprehension from pre- to post-infusion | Mild side effects | [ |
| Balovaptan | Vasopressin V1a receptor antagonist | Social behaviours | Improvements on the V-II ABC composite score | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Pioglitazone | PPAR-ϒ agonist | Core symptoms of ASD | Significant improvement in social withdrawal, repetitive behaviours, and externalizing behaviours | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| PS128 | Lactobacillus plantarum | ASD associated symptoms | Improved opposition/defiance behaviours Significantly improved in SNAP-IV | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| MTT | Microbiota | Gut microbiota composition GI and ASD symptoms | Significant improvement in the GSRS, reduction of GI symptoms and significantly improved behavioural symptoms | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Paliperidone | Dopamine and serotonin receptors antagonist | Irritability | Improvement on the ABC-I | Mild-to-moderate extrapyramidal symptoms Weight gain | [ |
| Donepezil | Cholinesterase inhibitor | ASD relevant behaviours | Significant improvement in ABC and the CGI-I Improvement in the Irritability and Hyperactivity subscales | Gastrointestinal disturbances Mild irritability | [ |
| Mecamylamine | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor | ASD relevant behaviours | Improvement in OACIS Decreased hyperactivity and irritability Improved verbalization | Constipation | [ |
| Acamprosate | Modulate GABA transmission | Social impairment | Much improved on the CGI-I and improvement on both the ABC Social Withdrawal subscale and the total raw score of the SRS Improved hyperactivity as measured by the ABC Hyperactivity subscale | Reduced appetite Mild nausea | [ |
| Amantadine | Noncompetitive NMDA antagonist | Hyperactivity Irritability | Significant improvements on ABC-CVs for hyperactivity and inappropriate speech Improvement on CGI | Insomnia | [ |
| N-Acetylcysteine | Glutamatergic modulator | Behavioural disturbance | Significant improvements on ABC-Irritability subscale | No serious AEs reported | [ |
| Olanzapine | 5-HT2, DA receptor antagonist | ASD relevant behaviours | Significant improvement on three subscales of the ABC (Irritability, Hyperactivity, and Excessive Speech) and the TARGET | Weight gain, increased appetite, and loss of strength. extrapyramidal symptoms | [ |
| Lurasidone | D2, 5-HT2A antagonist and 5HT1A partial agonist | Irritability | Significantly improvement in CGI-I | Vomiting and somnolence | [ |
| Galantamine | Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor | Irritability | Improvement in ABC | No serious AEs reported | [ |
ABC Aberrant Behaviour Checklist, AE adverse effect, CGI Clinical Global Impressions (-I = Improvement, -S = Severity), RFRLRS Ritvo-Freeman Real Life Rating Scale, ABC-CV Aberrant Behaviour Checklist-Community Version, PDD pervasive developmental disorders, CY-BOCS Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale, CMSDLS Children’s Memory Scale Dot Learning Subtest, VABS Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scale, ASQ Autism Symptom Questionnaire, BASC Behavioural Assessment System for Children, V-II ABC Vineland-II Adaptive Behaviour Scales, SNAP-IV The Swanson, Nolan, and Pelham-IV-Taiwan version, MTT Microbiota Transfer Therapy, GSRS Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale, GI gastrointestinal, OACIS Ohio Autism Clinical Impressions Scale, SRS Social Responsiveness Scale, TARGET a checklist of five target symptoms, Lethargy/Social Withdrawal subscales
Potential drugs in clinical trials
| Drug candidates | Pharmacological target | Improvement of symptoms | Registration number | Phase | Status | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lurasidone | D2 and 5-HT-2A receptor antagonist | Irritability | NCT01911442 | Phase 3 | Completed | _ |
| Atomoxetine | selective adrenergic uptake inhibitor | ADHD symptoms | NCT00498173 | Phase 3 | Completed | _ |
| Paliperidone | D2 partial agonist and 5-HT-2A receptor antagonist | Aggression, self-injury, irritability | NCT00549562 | Phase 3 | Completed | _ |
| Melatonin | MT1R agonist | Sleep disorders | NCT01906866 | Phase 3 | Completed | [ |
| Oxytocin | Biological peptides | Social difficulties | NCT01944046 | Phase 2 | Completed | [ |
| Guanfacine | Selective α2A adrenergic receptor agonist | PDD | NCT01238575 | Phase 4 | Completed | _ |
| Acamprosate | GABA agonist and partial glutamate antagonist | Social skills deficits | NCT01813318 | Phase 1 | Completed | _ |
| Memantine | Non-competitive NMDAR antagonist | Core symptoms of autism | NCT00872898 | Phase 2 | Completed | _ |
| Nuedexta | NMDA receptor antagonist | Irritability | NCT01630811 | Phase 2 | Completed | _ |
| D-cycloserine | Partial agonist of NMDA glutamate receptor | Symptoms of autism | NCT00198120 | Phase 3 | Completed | [ |
| Arbaclofen | Selective GABA-B agonist | Social withdrawal | NCT01288716 | Phase 2 | Completed | _ |
| Bumetanide | Selective NKCC1 antagonist | ASD | NCT03156153 | Phase 2 | Completed | _ |
| Donepezil | Cholinesterase inhibitor | Communication skills, social interaction | NCT01887132 | Phase 2 | Completed | _ |
| Mecamylamine | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor | Core symptoms of autism | NCT00773812 | Phase 1 | Completed | _ |
| Olanzapine | 5-HT2, DA receptor antagonist | Disruptive behaviours | NCT00057408 | Phase 2 | Completed | _ |
| Galantamine | Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor | ASD related | NCT00252603 | Phase 3 | Completed | _ |
| N-Acetylcysteine | Glutamatergic modulator | Behavioural disturbance | NCT00627705 | Phase 2 | Completed | [ |
| Pioglitazone | PPAR-ϒ agonist | Core symptoms of ASD | NCT01205282 | Phase 2 | Completed | [ |
| Balovaptan | Vasopressin V1a receptor antagonist | Social behaviours | NCT01418963 | Phase 1 | Completed | [ |
| Socialisation and communication difficulties | NCT03504917 | Phase 3 | Completed | [ | ||
| Amitriptyline | inhibition of serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake | Repetitive Behaviours | NCT04725383 | Phase 3 | Not yet recruiting | _ |
| Mirtazapine | 5-HT2 and 5-HT3 receptors antagonist | Anxiety | NCT01302964 | Phase 3 | Completed | [ |
| Tasimelteon | Melatonin receptor agonist | Sleep disturbances | NCT05361707 | Phase 3 | Recruiting | _ |
| IGF-1 | IGF-1R receptor agonist | Social withdrawal | NCT01970345 | Phase 2 | Recruiting | _ |
| JNJ-42165279 | Fatty acid amide hydrolase | Symptoms of autism | NCT03664232 | Phase 2 | Recruiting | _ |