Could a virus cause autism?

Similar documents
Scandinavian registries boost autism research

Genetic tests for autism debut amid concerns about validity

Problems decoding audio? Sounds like autism

Autism shares brain signature with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

Sequencing studies implicate inherited mutations in autism

Symptoms in children with autism follow diverse paths

Researchers probe genetic overlap between ADHD, autism

First mouse model of Timothy syndrome debuts

Evidence 1-Local Family Suffers Through HIV Tragedy

T39: Fertility Policy Checklist

CRISPR way to cut genes speeds advances in autism

Notable papers in autism research in 2018

Can nutritional supplements help treat some cases of autism?

Experts balk at large trial of stem cells for autism

Adoption and Foster Care

Committee Paper SCAAC(05/09)01. ICSI guidance. Hannah Darby and Rachel Fowler

Long-term studies chart autism's different trajectories

HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS. About Human papillomavirus

Psychiatric problems common in siblings of people with autism

WaySafe! Mapping Your Way to a Healthy Future

Experts call for universal fragile X screening

New blood test measures levels of fragile X protein

Notable papers in autism research in 2017

PROCEDURES LAPAROSCOPY

Microarray analysis deemed best genetic test for autism

Assisted Reproductive Technologies

Health Care Worker (Pregnant) - Infectious Diseases Risks and Exposure

HYPERIMMUNOGLOBULIN and CMV- DNAemia IN PREGNANT WOMEN WITH PRIMARY CYTOMEGALOVIRUS INFECTION

Reproductive Technology, Genetic Testing, and Gene Therapy

The Gay Woman s Guide to Becoming a Mom PATH2PARENTHOOD. path2parenthood.org

Human Services Child Development Multiple Choice Science Assessment Questions

Chapter 20: Risks of Adolescent Sexual Activity

Diagnostic tests for autism may miss many girls

CHAPTER 1: SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED AND BLOODBORNE INFECTIONS

Measles, Mumps and Rubella. Ch 10, 11 & 12

APEC Guidelines Immunizations

Treating Infertility

HIV and women having children

What s covered for your employees

The Pregnancy Journey...

XY CHROMOSOME MAKES WHAT EPUB

Iui Intrauterine Insemination

Epatite B: fertilità, gravidanza ed allattamento, aspetti clinici e terapeutici. Ivana Maida

Fertility Desires/Management of Serodiscordant HIV + Couples

East and North Hertfordshire CCG. Fertility treatment and referral criteria for tertiary level assisted conception

Unit 2 Physiology and Health Part (a) The Reproductive System HOMEWORK BOOKLET

Smart genes; Neanderthal mini-brains; diabetes link and more

Zika: Deet, There It Is. Anna Powell, MD Reproductive Infectious Disease Fellow THEGOS

Objectives. Types of HIV Tests. Age Appropriateness of Tests. Breastfeeding and HIV Testing. Why are there different tests for different ages?

Lecture Series: Pregnancy

New report shows slight uptick in autism prevalence

Bio 12- Ch. 21: Reproductive System

Written by Kate Raines Thursday, 01 December :00 - Last Updated Thursday, 14 September :41

Big brains may hold clues to origins of autism

What you need to know to: Keep Yourself SAFE!

Fertility Services Commissioning Policy

Early Diet = Lifelong Health for Generations

Management of Viral Infection during Pregnancy

PRECONCEPTION COUNSELING

Sperm Donation - Information for Donors

SUBFERTILITY. (Defined as involuntary failure to conceive within 12 months with regular coitus)

Michigan Guidelines: HIV, Syphilis, HBV in Pregnancy

What are the main functions of the male reproductive system? 1. Produce sperm 2. Deposit sperm into the female 3. Provide a pathway for the removal

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON MEDICAL CENTER Men s Health Center and Male Fertility Laboratory Sperm & Testis Cryopreservation Program Patient NAME and ID

Immunizations Offered

Sibling studies reveal early signs of autism

Name: Grade 6 Sexual Health Workbook

The Study of Congenital Infections. A/Prof. William Rawlinson Dr. Sian Munro

Fertility treatment and referral criteria for tertiary level assisted conception

Reproductive Health & Safety. This is from a 1953 Sex Education Curriculum

Antidepressant does not relieve repetitive behaviors

Guidelines on safer conception in fertile HIV infected individuals

Fertility What do GP s need to know? Richard Fisher Fertility Associates

Fertility treatment and referral criteria for tertiary level assisted conception

Increased Length of Awareness of Assisted Reproductive Technologies Fosters Positive Attitudes and Acceptance among Women

Physicists' model proposes evolutionary role for cancer

SUMMARY TABLE OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS

Neural Development 1

Burning debate: What s the best way to nab real autism genes?

Maternal Infection and Autism

STIs and BBVs. The facts

B1 You and Your Genes Q3 Question: What are alleles?

Module 2 Understanding the Science of Brain Development

toe... Chlamydia - CDC Fact Sheet Appendix K - Part 2

What do scientists mean when they talk about environmental factors that cause autism?

Double take. By Emily Sohn / December 10, 2008

Unit 4: Reproduction Chapter 6. Meiosis is the basis of sexual reproduction.

Page 1. Name:

Relevant Communicable Diseases in HCT/Ps

Fertility Services Commissioning Policy (Level 3)

11 Misconceptions & Myths About HIV

INFERTILITY SERVICES

DREAMS TO REALITY. Family Building for Men and Women Living with HIV PATH2PARENTHOOD. path2parenthood.org/hiv

Sperm production. Sperm production. Meiosis. Mitosis. The cells of Leydig in testes secrete

Sperm production. Sperm production. Controlling sperm production. Meiosis. Mitosis. The cells of Leydig in testes secrete

Preventive Care Services Summary

Preventive Care Services Summary

Mendelian & Complex Traits. Quantitative Imaging Genomics. Genetics Terminology 2. Genetics Terminology 1. Human Genome. Genetics Terminology 3

LCCG Fertility Services Commissioning Policy

Transcription:

NEWS Could a virus cause autism? BY VIRGINIA HUGHES 28 MARCH 2011 1 / 6

Strong swimmers: Sperm move like motorboats through the vaginal tract, and viruses may hop aboard. For some individuals, autism begins at conception, when an infected sperm cell transmits a virus to the egg: that is the provocative new hypothesis of a group in Italy based on data from brain tissue and semen. Last year, Antonio Persico and colleagues reported that traces of polyomaviruses a family of common viruses that can cause tumors are more likely to crop up in postmortem brain tissue of individuals with autism than in that of healthy controls 1. In unpublished work, the researchers have also found that seminal fluid from fathers of children with autism is more likely to carry 2 / 6

polyomavirus than is fluid from fathers of healthy children. How a sperm might transmit a virus, and how the virus would then cause autism is unclear, which makes some experts deeply skeptical. "It's something that may serve as pioneering work, but needs to be completed," notes S. Hossein Fatemi, professor of psychiatry at the University of Minnesota. If it's true, however, the theory could explain the 'missing heritability' puzzle of autism. Autism has a strong genetic component: identical twins are much more likely to both have the disorder than are fraternal twins. Yet, so far, researchers have identified relatively few DNA variants to account for this genetic risk. "It may well be that each and every one of these families has a [unique] mutation," notes Persico, associate professor of child neuropsychiatry at the University Campus Bio-Medico in Rome. "But I think we should keep our minds open to the possibility that what is being passed down from parent to child is not human DNA." Instead, he says, what's being passed down may be viral DNA. The rubella virus, for example, can cross the placenta and directly infect the fetus. A string of studies in the 1970s found that if a woman is infected with rubella in early pregnancy, her risk of having a child with autism significantly rises 2. Since then, a large body of work on animal models has shown that maternal immune response during pregnancy can disrupt fetal brain development. "If this hypothesis is borne out with further work, it has enormous implications," says Paul Patterson, professor of biological sciences at the California Institute of Technology, who has done much of the animal work on maternal infection. "If a virus is vertically transmitted, then what would appear on the surface to be genetic could actually be environmental." Viral signatures: Little is known about how sperm transmit viruses, but there is some evidence that it's possible. For example, case studies of artificial insemination have shown that the hepatitis B, hepatitis C and HIV viruses, among others, can directly pass from donor sperm to the woman receiving it 3. No one has demonstrated definitively that viruses can directly infect an egg via sperm, but a few studies have shown that viruses and sperm can interact. On their own, viruses rely on random diffusion to move through fluid, like a raft floating on the open sea. That makes it difficult for them to cross the thick mucus that lines the vaginal tract, notes Katharina Ribbeck, assistant professor of biological engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 3 / 6

By contrast, sperm move like motorboats. "Sperm have evolved to swim through this spider web of mucus," she says. "Viruses might hook up with sperm to take advantage of their motility." Supporting this idea, in 2009 Ribbeck's group showed that the human papillomavirus can bind to two specific regions on the head of a sperm cell 4. If a virus could infect a fetus and cause autism, then traces of its genome should appear in the brain. In the study published last year, Persico's team tested this by searching for eight viruses known to affect the brain in postmortem brain tissue from 15 individuals with autism and 13 controls. They analyzed tissue from the primary auditory cortex, which has shown abnormalities in imaging studies of people with autism. The researchers found traces of viral genomes in 80 percent of the brains from those with autism and 62 percent of control brains, a difference that is not statistically significant. When they separated the viruses by type, however, they found polyomaviruses specifically, JC virus, BK virus and simian virus in 67 percent of brains from people with autism compared with 23 percent of controls, a statistically significant difference. Other postmortem studies some based on the same tissue used in the new study have reported inflammation in the brains of those with autism. This could be a consequence of early-onset viral infection, Persico says. Paternal origins: Some experts strike a note of caution, saying the results are intriguing, but more data is needed to show that parent-to-child transmission of a virus can cause autism. It could be, for instance, that individuals with autism have an impaired immune system, which leads to abnormal regulation of viral DNA in their brains. "These viruses could come from a number of sources, prenatal or postnatal," Fatemi says. "To really clinch this [hypothesis], it will be very important to know from whom these viruses were transmitted, from mother or father." Fatemi points out that most animal work on prenatal infection has found that viruses cannot cross the placenta. In January, his group published a study in which they infected pregnant mice with the influenza virus. Although infection changed the expression of many genes in the fetal brain, the researchers found no traces of the virus itself in the placenta suggesting that the fetal abnormalities are caused by the mother's immune response, rather than by the virus 5. Some studies have suggested that polyomaviruses can cross the placenta 6, whereas others found the opposite 7. Persico is investigating a possible paternal link first because sperm cells are more easily 4 / 6

accessible than egg cells. "It's just a practical and ethical issue, not an experimental one," he says. His team is genetically screening semen samples from fathers of children with autism, fathers of healthy children, and infertile men for traces of viruses. Preliminary data from about 70 men shows that seminal fluid from autism fathers is more likely to carry polyomavirus than is fluid from controls. Still, the research is in its infancy, and Persico hopes to extend it to other viruses. Last month, for instance, he reported that there is no trace of the XMRV virus in blood samples or in postmortem brain tissue from people with autism, nor in semen samples from fathers of children with autism 8. "I definitely want to look more broadly at other viral sequences," Persico says. "I'm pursuing polyomavirus because I have those data, but I keep myself very much open-minded." References: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Lintas C. et al. J. Neurovirol. 16, 141-149 (2010) PubMed Chess S. et al. J. Pediatr. 93, 699-703 (1978) PubMed Englert Y. et al. Hum. Reprod. Update 10, 149-162 (2004) PubMed Pérez-Andino J. et al. PLoS One 4, e5847 (2009) PubMed Fatemi S.H. et al. Neuropharmacology Epub ahead of print (2011) PubMed Pietropaolo V. et al. J. Med. Virol. 56, 372-376 (1998) PubMed Boldorini R. et al. Pathology 40, 72-77 (2008) PubMed 5 / 6

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Spectrum Autism Research News 8. Lintas C. et al. PLoS One 6, e16609 (2011) PubMed 6 / 6