AI Article Synopsis

  • Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects over 1% of children, and current treatments do not effectively address its core symptoms, though studies indicate links between ASD and immune response variations.
  • Researchers found that children with ASD often have increased levels of immune molecules, particularly immunoglobulin A, and exhibit abnormal gut immune function.
  • In a study of genetic samples from 72 children with ASD and 107 healthy controls, four rare genetic variants related to immune response were identified, suggesting a possible genetic basis for the immune abnormalities seen in ASD.

Article Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects more than 1% of children, and there is no viable pharmacotherapeutic agent to treat the core symptoms of ASD. Studies have shown that children with ASD show changes in their levels of immune response molecules. Our previous studies have shown that ASD is more common in children with folate receptor autoantibodies. We also found that children with ASD have abnormal gut immune function, which was characterized by a significant increase in the content of immunoglobulin A and an increase in gut-microbiota-associated epitope diversity. These studies suggest that the immune mechanism plays an important role in the occurrence of ASD. The present study aims to systematically assess gene mutations in immune mediators in patients with ASD. We collected genetic samples from 72 children with ASD (2−12 years old) and 107 healthy controls without ASD (20−78 years old). We used our previously-designed immune gene panel, which can capture cytokine and receptor genes, the coding regions of MHC genes, and genes of innate immunity. Target region sequencing (500×) and bioinformatics analytical methods were used to identify variants in immune response genes associated with patients with ASD. A total of 4 rare variants were found to be associated with ASD, including HLA-B: p.A93G, HLA-DQB1: p.S229N, LILRB2: p.R322H, and LILRB2: c.956-4C>T. These variants were present in 44.44% (32/72) of the ASD patients and were detected in 3.74% (4/107) of the healthy controls. We expect these genetic variants will serve as new targets for the clinical genetic assessment of ASD, and our findings suggest that immune abnormalities in children with ASD may have a genetic basis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9223212PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13061098DOI Listing

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