Differences in mid-gestational and early postnatal neonatal cytokines and chemokines are associated with patterns of maternal autoantibodies in the context of autism.

Cereb Cortex

Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Clinical Immunology, University of California Davis, 451 Health Sciences Drive, Suite 6505C, Davis, CA 95616, United States.

Published: May 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how maternal immune dysregulation, particularly through autoantibodies and cytokine levels during pregnancy, may contribute to neurodevelopmental disorders like autism in offspring.
  • It focuses on specific maternal autoantibodies that can affect proteins crucial for fetal brain development and categorizes mothers into three groups based on their autoantibody status.
  • By analyzing serum samples and neonatal blood spots, the researchers aim to uncover links between these maternal factors and the cytokine/chemokine profiles that could influence the child's neurodevelopment.

Article Abstract

Associations between maternal immune dysregulation (including autoimmunity and skewed cytokine/chemokine profiles) and offspring neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism have been reported. In maternal autoantibody-related autism, specific maternally derived autoantibodies can access the fetal compartment to target eight proteins critical for neurodevelopment. We examined the relationship between maternal autoantibodies to the eight maternal autoantibody-related autism proteins and cytokine/chemokine profiles in the second trimester of pregnancy in mothers of children later diagnosed with autism and their neonates' cytokine/chemokine profiles. Using banked maternal serum samples from 15 to 19 weeks of gestation from the Early Markers for Autism Study and corresponding banked newborn bloodspots, we identified three maternal/offspring groups based on maternal autoantibody status: (1) mothers with autoantibodies to one or more of the eight maternal autoantibody-related autismassociated proteins but not a maternal autoantibody-related autism-specific pattern, (2) mothers with a known maternal autoantibody-related autism pattern, and (3) mothers without autoantibodies to any of the eight maternal autoantibody-related autism proteins. Using a multiplex platform, we measured maternal second trimester and neonatal cytokine/chemokine levels. This combined analysis aimed to determine potential associations between maternal autoantibodies and the maternal and neonatal cytokine/chemokine profiles, each of which has been shown to have implications on offspring neurodevelopment independently.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11065110PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhae082DOI Listing

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