Maryland: Autism is not a single condition, but a spectrum of disorders that
affect the brain’s ability to perceive and process information. Recent
research suggests that too many connections in the brain could be at
least partially responsible for the symptoms of autism, from
communication deficits to unusual talents.
New research from the University
of Maryland suggests that this overload of connections begins early in
mammalian development, when key neurons in a region of the brain known
as the cerebral cortex begin to form their first circuits.
By pinpointing where and when
autism-related neural defects first emerge in mice, the study results
could lead to a stronger understanding of autism in humans—including
possible early intervention strategies. The researchers outline their
findings in a research paper published January 31, 2017 in the journal Cell Reports.
“Our work suggests that the neural
pathology of autism manifests in the earliest cortical circuits, formed
by a cell type called subplate neurons,” said UMD Biology Professor and
senior study author Patrick Kanold.
“Nobody has looked at developing circuits this early, in this level of
detail, in the context of autism before. This is truly a new discovery
and potentially represents a new paradigm for autism research.”
The cerebral cortex is the outer
part of the mammalian brain that controls perception, memory and, in
humans, higher functions such as language and abstract reasoning. The
developing cerebral cortex contains a distinct class of cells called
subplate neurons, which form the brain's first connections or circuits.
As the brain grows, the interconnected subplate neurons build a network
of scaffolding thought to support other neurons that grow later in
development.
“The cortex is a very important
region in the adult human brain that undergoes a complex, multi-stage
development process,” said Daniel Nagode, a former postdoctoral
researcher at UMD and lead author of the study. “Because our findings
implicate the earliest stages of cortex circuit formation in a mouse
model, they suggest that the pathological changes leading to autism
might start before birth in humans.”
To study the relationship between
autism and subplate neuron development in mice, Kanold, Nagode and their
collaborators began with a well-established mouse model of autism. The
model involves dosing mouse embryos with valproic acid (VPA) on day 12
of their 20-day gestation period by injecting the drug into the mother
mouse.
VPA has a known link to autism in
humans and also induces autism-like cognitive and behavioral
abnormalities in mice. For example, normal newborn mouse pups will emit
frequent, high-pitched noises when they are separated from their
littermates, but VPA-treated pups do not.
The researchers used a technique called laser scanning
photo-stimulation to map the connections between individual subplate
neuron cells in the brains of the mouse pups. Within the first week
after birth, the VPA-dosed mice showed some patches of abnormal
“hyperconnected” subplate neurons. In contrast, control mouse pups dosed
with plain saline solution showed normal connections throughout their
cortical tissue.
Ten days after birth, the patches
of hyperconnected subplate neurons had grown more widespread and
homogeneous in the VPA-dosed pups compared with the normal (control)
pups. Because subplate neurons help lay the foundation for cortical
development in all mammalian brains, a thicket of hyperconnected
subplate neurons in the developing cortex could result in permanent
hyperconnections.
“Subplate neurons form critical
developmental structures. If their early progress is impaired, later
development of the cortex is also impaired,” Kanold explained. “In a
developing human fetus, this stage is a critical gateway, when subplate
neuron circuits are the most abundant.”
If the same dynamic plays out in
human brains, hyperconnections in the developing cortex could result in
the neural pathologies observed in human autism, Kanold said. In mice as
well as in humans, the critical window of time when subplate neurons
develop is very short.
“The timing of the effects is
important. The hyperconnectivity in VPA pups occurs only in small
patches a few days after birth,” Nagode said. “But after 10 days, the
hyperconnectivity becomes much more widespread.”
In mice, subplate neuron
development takes place mostly after birth. Eventually, the subplate
neurons die off and disappear, their job done, as other neural circuits
take their place. In humans, however, the first subplate neuron
connections form in the second trimester. By the time humans are born,
most of their subplate neurons have already disappeared.
“Our results suggest that we might
have to interfere quite early to address autism,” Kanold said. “The
fetal brain is not just a small adult brain, and these subplate neurons
are the major difference. There may, in fact, be other developmental
disorders we can tackle using this information.”
In addition to Kanold and Nagode, the study features
contributions from UMD Assistant Research Scientists Daniel Winkowski
and Ed Smith; Postdoctoral Associate Xianying Meng; Undergraduate
Researchers Hamza Khan-Tareen and Vishnupriya Kareddy; and UMD School of
Medicine Professor Joseph Kao.
Their research paper, “Abnormal
development of the earliest cortical circuits in a mouse model of Autism
Spectrum Disorder,” Daniel Nagode, Xiangying Meng, Daniel Winkowski, Ed
Smith, Hamza Khan-Tareen, Vishnupriya Kareddy, Joseph Kao, and Patrick
Kanold, was published January 31, 2017 in the journal Cell Reports.
This work was supported by the
National Institutes of Health (Award Nos. R01DC009607, R01GM056481,
CEBHT32DC00046 and CEBHF32DC014887). The content of this article does
not necessarily reflect the views of that organization.