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Monday, 16 May 2022

Mopping up harmful gut metabolites with Carbon (AB 2004) or Silicone (Enterosgel) to improve GI and behavioral problems in Autism

 


We have seen in previous posts that certain metabolites produced in the gut can worsen existing autism and even create autism in mouse models.

Much has been written about propionic acid, which when produced in the gut, rather than the beneficial butyric acid, causes behavioral problems.  This is what underlies the Nemechek Protocol, developed by Patrick Nemecheck, DO.  In his therapy you try to increase butyric acid production using inulin as a dietary fiber.  It does work for some people, but they are in the minority; in a small group it makes matters worse.

We also saw that P-cresol, another chemical produced by fermentation in the gut, can trigger autistic behaviors.

P-Cresol, like Propionic acid – a cause of Transitory Autism for some and a further burden for others

A few years ago in the research we did come across a “wonder” bacteria called B. fragilis (Bacteroides fragilis).  This bacterium was able to reverse autism in the mouse model of maternal immune activation (MIA).  The actual mechanism was by reducing a gut metabolite called 4EPS.  It turns out that 4EPS is closely related to P-cresol. The B. fragilis bacteria is essential to healthy gastrointestinal function, but it must not enter the bloodstream because it can cause a fatal blood infection. 

Antibiotics and Autism(s) – Pass the Bacteroides Fragilis?

 

How to defeat 4EPS

You would think that the easiest way to get rid of that harmful 4EPS would be simply to take B. fragilis, as a probiotic.

An Australian company called Axial decided instead to use a special form of carbon taken orally to “mop up” the 4EPS. The research drug is called AB-2004.




This carbon cannot be selective for 4EPS, so it will also “mop up” other things as well.

It does look like elevated 4EPS in autism is also associated with GI problems and that anxiety is the key feature of autism that is made worse.

I think you could describe AB-2004 as a therapy to restore GI integrity in autism that will also reduce anxiety is a sub-group.

If you have autism with anxiety, but perfect GI function, it does not look like you are going to benefit from AB-2004.

 

What about Silicone rather than Carbon? 

I was recently introduced to a product normally used to treat IBS-D (irritable bowel syndrome with Diarrhea).  The other type is called IBS-C, with C being for constipation.

It seems that some people with autism and GI problems respond very well to the OTC product Enterosgel, which claims to mop up harmful substances using a silicon gel (polymethylsiloxane polyhydrate) in combination with purified water

As with the experimental AB-2004, the silicone gel cannot be selective for any particular metabolite.



There are clinical trials looking at the benefit of Enterosgel in IBS-D.

 

Here is a current trial in the United Kingdom:

 

RELIEVE IBS-D trial


You can actually measure 4EPS in urine, (as you can P-cresol).  It would not be hard to see if Enterosgel lowers the elevated 4EPS found in people with autism + GI dysfunction. 

Of note is that for our reader Dragos in Romania, Enterosgel worked wonders in his adult son with IBS-C plus challenging behaviors, rather than IBS-D. 

  

4EPS  

The microbiota modulates gut physiology and behavioral abnormalities associated with autism 

A Serum Metabolite Induces ASD-Related Behavior

MIA-dependent increases of specific metabolites, and their restoration by B. fragilis, suggest that small molecules may play a role in ASD-related behaviors. To test this hypothesis, we examined whether increasing serum 4EPS is sufficient to cause any ASD-related behavioral abnormalities in naïve mice. Mice were treated with 4EPS potassium salt (Figures S7A–C) or vehicle, daily from 3 weeks of age (when MIA offspring display gut permeability) to 6 weeks of age (when behavior testing begins). Remarkably, systemic administration of the single metabolite, 4EPS, to naïve wild-type mice is sufficient to induce anxiety-like behavior similar to that observed in MIA offspring (Figure 6C). Relative to vehicle-treated controls, mice exposed to 4EPS travel comparable distances in the open field but spend less time in the center arena (Figure 6C). Also, in the PPI test, 4EPS-treated mice exhibit increased intensity of startle in response to the unconditioned primary stimulus, but no significant alterations in PPI (Figure 6D), representing anxiety-associated potentiation of the startle reflex (Bourin et al., 2007). Conversely, there are no significant differences between 4EPS-treated versus saline-treated mice in marble burying or USV behavior (Figures S7D and S7E), suggesting that elevating serum 4EPS levels specifically promotes anxiety-like behavior. While not a core diagnostic criterion, anxiety is a common co-morbidity that may contribute to cardinal ASD symptoms. Furthermore, it is possible that complex behaviors may be modulated by combinations of metabolites. In summary, these data reveal that elevated systemic levels of a metabolite regulated by gut microbes causes an ASD-related behavior, suggesting that molecular connections between the gut and the brain maybe associated with autism.

In a proof-of-concept test of the this hypothesis, we reveal that the microbially-modulated metabolite 4EPS, which is elevated in the circulation by MIA and restored by B. fragilis treatment, is sufficient to induce anxiety-like behavior in naïve mice. These data indicate that metabolomic changes contribute to the onset and/or persistence of autism-related behavioral abnormalities. Notably, we show that commensal microbes are required for the production of serum 4EPS in mice. Several species of Clostridium are believed to be producers of the precursor 4-ethylphenol (Nicholson et al., 2012), consistent with our findings that levels of the Lachnospiraceae family of Clostridia and serum 4EPS are elevated in MIA offspring, and both are corrected by B. fragilis treatment. Moreover, the structural similarity of 4EPS to p-cresol, which also derives from Clostridium species (Persico and Napolioni, 2013), suggests they may be produced through similar biosynthetic pathways (see Figure S6A). Although not all autism-like behaviors are affected by 4EPS alone, our results warrant the examination of several other serum metabolites, perhaps in combination, for their potential to impact the spectrum of autism-related behaviors. 

 

The Gut Microbiota and Autism Spectrum Disorders

AB-2004, its orally administered, drug candidate that has demonstrated the ability to repair leaky gut and improve repetitive behavior, anxiety, and ASD-related sensorimotor gating deficits by removing key microbial metabolites in animal models with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).

 

The main highlights from the poster presentation titled, “Characterization of GI barrier integrity and gut microbiome-derived metabolites in BTBR, Shank3 and Cntnap2 mouse models of ASD and demonstration of AB-2004 as a potential mitigating therapeutic” include:

 

·     The Cntnap2-/- mouse model accurately recapitulated the leaky gut phenotype and elevated levels of the gut microbiome-derived metabolite 4-EPS that have been reported in ASD patients

·     Treatment with AB-2004 effectively restored GI integrity and reduced elevated 4-EPS levels in Cntnap2-/- mice

·     The Cntnap2-/- model has been identified as a promising and translationally relevant animal model for the development of microbiome-inspired therapies for the effective treatment of GI and behavioral dysfunctions in ASD

·     These data support the development of AB-2004 as a treatment for GI dysfunction in ASD and potentially behavioral symptoms through reduction of pathologically active microbiome-derived metabolites Axial is currently screening ASD adolescents for its Phase 1b/2a clinical trial of AB-2004.


Scientific evidence has shown there may be a link between bacteria commonly found in the digestive tract, and the brain which could contribute to certain characteristics, such as irritability, in children with ASD. AB-2004 is designed to adsorb certain substances produced by gut bacteria to reduce their ability to enter the bloodstream and reach the brain.   

 

The active ingredient in AB-2004 is a highly engineered form of spherical carbon designed with human safety and biological selectivity in mind, making it very different from activated charcoal. Each sphere of AB-2004 consists of a network of pores that allows it to selectively adsorb metabolites that may contribute to characteristics associated with ASD like irritability and anxiety.

 


Axial reports findings of elevated 4-EPS in children with ASD 

The findings showed that concentrations of the bacterial metabolite, 4-ethylphenylsulfate (4-EPS) were elevated as much as six-fold in serum samples from children with ASD compared to healthy controls in replicate analyses.

This research builds on previous work published by Axial's Co-founder and Caltech Professor, Sarkis Mazmanian, Ph.D., that demonstrated causality between 4-EPS and anxiety-like behaviors in the "maternal immune activation" (MIA) mouse model of ASD. The MIA model recapitulates key features of the autism phenotype, including increased anxiety, stereotypic behaviors, and decreased vocalizations and social behaviors. Dr. Mazmanian found changes in the gut microbiome (dysbiosis), increased intestinal permeability (IP), and elevated levels of the putative bacterial metabolite 4-EPS in MIA mice, compared to controls. Oral treatment with B. fragilis, a human commensal gut bacterial species, resulted in restoration of gut microbial profiles, decreased IP, and markedly reduced serum concentrations of 4-EPS.

The current study aimed to evaluate 4-EPS levels in children with ASD compared to samples from control children. Two analyses were performed, a 4-EPS targeted analysis in 103 pediatric subjects and a non-targeted serum metabolomics study involving 230 children (cohorts from the "Childhood Autism Risks from Genetics and the Environment" study ongoing at the Univ. of California Davis). 4-EPS concentrations were found to be significantly elevated in children with ASD vs. healthy controls in both analyses. In addition, elevated levels were associated with worse social performance on two separate measurements. The impact of this elevation on behavior, and the impact of treatment with B. fragilis and with Axial's small molecule therapeutic, AB-2004, will be the subject of subsequent human clinical studies.

 

Anxiety Linked to Gut Microbial Metabolite in Mouse and Human

In a small, single-cohort pilot study reported simultaneously in a Nature Medicine article titled, “Safety and target engagement of an oral small-molecule sequestrant in adolescents with autism spectrum disorder: an open-label phase 1b/2a trial“(trial registration no. ACTRN12618001956291), Mazmanian’s team tested an oral drug (AB-2004) that adsorbs 4EPS in the gut in 30 adolescents with autism. In addition to reducing 4EPS levels in blood and urine, and improving gut health, a subset of the tested participants showed reduced irritability and anxiety.

 

  

What is Enerosgel?  (click the link)

 


 

Conclusion 

I imagine both AB-2004 and Enterosgel are removing numerous metabolites from the digestive tract.

We know that at least 3 metabolites (Propionic acid, P-cresol and 4EPS) can induce autism in a previously not autistic mammal.  There are undoubted other metabolites that will be added to this list.  In the case of Propionic acid the autism was reversable using NAC (N-acetylcysteine).

Since you will have to wait years for AB-2004 to become an approved drug, if indeed it ever happens, you might just have to hope that Enterosgel is equally effective at mopping up that 4EPS with silicone.

It is pretty clear that the Australians are targeting anxious Aspies with GI problems, with AB-2004.

Is Enterosgel going to benefit those with autism and without GI dysfunction?  I think it is less likely, but it could happen.  The effect might not relate just to 4EPS. 

 

 

Enterosgel for food allergy? 

I do wonder about the use of Enterosgel following an acute food allergy.

Many people take the mast cell stabilizer cromolyn sodium (Nalcrom) to deal with food allergy.  Indeed, for some people, instead of eliminating the food they are allergic to, they take Nalcrom.

Apparently, some people with food allergies are taking Enterosgel regularly.

What happens if you consume a food substance by mistake that you are allergic too?

This is what happened recently to Monty while on holiday in Greece.  Two small red patches appeared on either side of his face and his mood and behavior changed dramatically.  It was like his pollen allergy triggered summertime raging, but it was not due to pollen allergy.

The effect of an allergic reactions continues even after you remove the allergen.  If you are allergic to bee stings you might end up needing a steroid injection to settle your immune system down.  In the immediate term you can take an oral H1 antihistamine.

Monty had his H1 antihistamine and a single oral dose of Prednisone; after 3 days he was back to his usual self.

People who get severe allergic reactions carry an Epipen (an epinephrine autoinjector).

In Monty’s case there is never a severe allergic reaction, but there is a severe behavioral reaction to a modest allergic reaction.  I think this is likely to be quite common in people with autism and challenging behaviors.  It often goes untreated, or is poorly treated using anti-psychotic drugs, which then cause serious side-effects including tardive dyskinesia (motor tics), obesity, males growing breasts (drug-induced gynecomastia) etc.

Even though Monty has no GI problems, perhaps I should acquire some Enterosgel to use in case of a future acute food allergy attack?








19 comments:

  1. hello, good day, it would be ideal to have some kind of place where a compatibility of symptoms of our children can be made, thus having a reference of where to go

    For example, my son's feet, hands and mouth turn very red, it seems to itch a lot, he has severe autism
    Drink a lot of water and eat a lot
    I can't find someone with similar symptoms and doctors in Latin America don't think it has anything to do with autism
    Melisa

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    1. It could be an indication of MCAS(mast cell activation syndrome). It is implicated in autism and has multiple mentions.

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    2. Melisa, understanding symptoms should indeed take you closer to effective treatments. This is really why we have doctors, but autism and some other neurological conditions are yet to be seen as treatable.

      Many people with autism seem to have cold feet/hands, which is telling us something useful.

      Drinking a lot of water is called Polydipsia and it is a treatable medical condition. There was a post all about it.

      https://epiphanyasd.blogspot.com/2020/02/thirst-too-much-or-too-little.html

      Mast cell activation syndrome is indeed a problem in some people with severe autism. Depending where you live, it can be hard to get a diagnosis. Cromolyn Sodium is a common therapy. Ask your doctor.

      Many people with severe autism eat too much. This can be a feature of a single gene type of autism. In countries that give anti-psychotic drugs to children, obesity is almost inevitable. Over eating can also be a stimming behavior, as can be drinking too much, in those people behavioral interventions can help.

      Flushing (blood vessels in the skin dilate and make the skin go red) can be caused by too much histamine, serotonin etc. It can also lead to GI problems and indeed polydipsia.

      MCAS is indeed a possible explanation for many of your son's symptoms.

      You could write to Dr Theoharides
      https://www.mastcellmaster.com/

      He knows all about mast cells and autism. He does write back.

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  2. Hi Peter. We have just started Valtrex. My son has bilateral hypoperfusion of temporal lobes on SPECT scan, which can be a consequence of hsv encephalitis. However, my son has zero titres and zero antibodies to hsv1 or hsv2, EBV etc and only normal antibodies to HHV6. In reading about Valtrex, I ran across some articles suggesting that it modifies adenosine expression, and co-incidentally that adenosine is sometimes used in place of Verapamil in heart failure patients. Do you have any thoughts about Valtrex and adenosine? My son is a wonderful Verapamil responder. It halts aggression and rage within 20 minutes, but he still has language impairment and cognitive impairment that seems to come and go seasonally with pollen allergies. Thank you!

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    1. EDFW, antivirals do seem to help some people with autism. I do not think this area is fully understood. It is even thought that viruses may play a role in some Multiple Sclerosis.

      If Valtrex helps, great. If it gives no benefit, then stop.

      I was recently talking to a US psychiatrist who uses Pentoxifylline to enhance cognition. He discovered this effect having himself been prescribed the drug for other reasons.
      People with hypoperfusion and some cognitive deficits might benefit from a therapy that increases blood supply to the brain.

      Pentoxifylline has actually been used in autism for half a century and it is a cheap generic drug. Readers of this blog are taking it long term.

      If you have pollen allergy related cognitive regression, you clearly try and minimize the allergy itself, but you can also add additional anti-inflammatory therapy during the allergy period. In our case I add Pioglitazone, but Pentoxifylline would be another logical option.

      To improve speech there are many options. Calcium Folinate (Leucovorin) clearly works for many people. We had a very clear increase in verbalization years ago from broccoli powder. Ponstan (Mefenamic Acid) is making my son currently talk much more.

      Improving cognition is possible for a significant minority (Bumetanide, Statin drugs and even Metformin). In people with autism plus auto-immune conditions, reducing "inflammation" is likely to boost cognition and general functioning.

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    2. Thank you Peter. Pentoxifylline is on my list to try as I have read it increases brain perfusion by 20% and have read several case reports of it being beneficial for autism. Would you mind sharing the name of the psychiatrist you mentioned; since I am in the US.

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    3. EDFW, I spoke with him and he is happy for you to contact him.

      Robert Charles Powell, MD, PhD
      rcpowellpowell@bluetiehome.com

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    4. Hi Peter, interesting to hear Ponstan effect on speech, definetely on my list along with Leucovorin, going to my home country for summer where i should be able to leucovorin and ponstan, so looking forward to test both.

      My girl has dysbiosis too, so was super insightful to hear about benefit of enterosgel which i have just ordered too, along with curcumin. Psyllium helps a lot for her constipation and hope eneterosgel will help to improve microbiome further (i won't try curcumin yet, as few studies was indicating it may pro-oxidative side effect if body cant take care of phenols - any thoughts on this?).

      Meantime, i have ordered Luteolin (NeuroProtek) which is claimed as beneficial for speech. The paper below was interesting read, which by the way has folinate too as a recommendation. Any thoughts on Luteolin?

      https://www.researchgate.net/publication/333733106_Speech-Stimulating_Substances_in_Autism_Spectrum_Disorders

      Thanks
      Timur

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    5. Timur, lack of speech is a downstream consequence of numerous possible dysfunctions. Anything that “improves” autism is likely to improve speech/communication. For some people the main problem is poor cognition, which leads to no desire to communicate.

      Calcium Folinate seems to be a particular intervention where increase in speech is the best marker of a responder.

      Neuroprotek is a combination of natural mast cell stabilizers from Dr Theoharides. If it helps, great.

      It looks like a small percentage of people do not tolerate curcumin. It is seen as very healthy and in some parts of the world people eat it in large quantities. I think you will need a lot of curcumin to have an effect

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  3. EDFW, I am very interested in your case since we have the same case. We have hypoperfusion of noncentral brain regions, and we have HSV all over the place. I would like to say that HHV6 is not as simple as "he has just the normal antibodies". Best to read up on the website of the HHV6 foundation. We have been put on a 6 month regimen of Valtrex and it is showing a lot of promise so far, a month in.
    Also, our neuroimmunologist claims that the hypoperfusion is due to mitochondrial problems and has put her on a mito cocktail. She is doing better since we introduced these two things on top of what we already do - IVIG and Ponstan, Mirokrom and Galavit.

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    Replies
    1. Tatjana, we have just started the Valtrex but certainly my son’s behavior is different. He developed a new obsession with our roof attic (pull down ladder) and has been playing there for the last two days. He is 13 so this behavior is not really appropriate. He also began repeating the same word over and over again (ship, ship, ship, ship). I find it very interesting, and his doctor did warn me that behavior often becomes worse for a week or more before there are any improvements. My son has some abnormal immune markers on lab work. High B cells, high blood histimine, deficiency of IGG subclass 1, low secretory IgA. He regressed late (between age 3 and 4) after having chronic diarrhea and a few months following a tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy. He was also a c section birth and had to be intubated/NICU 10 days.

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    2. Tatjana, Two questions for you. Does your daughter have any mast cell activation issues or food sensitivities? (speculating Mirokrom is to treat that). My son has skin rashes, red ears, salicylate sensitivity, nitrate sensitivity (beef jerky and pepperoni can make him emotionally labile and aggressive, laugh inappropriately for hours, and almost manic where he believes he can jump from something high and not be hurt). He has marked behavioral regression during pollen season. Also, what is the mito cocktail that you have found helpful? We have used carnitine and CoQ10 with riboflavin in the past although we have never been able to demonstrate mitochondrial dysfunction on any lab work. Because of his late regression, mitochondrial disease has always been on my radar but I can't document it. Thank you for comparing notes with me.

      Delete
  4. Hello, she has had elevated eosinophils since the day she was born until she started Mirokrom - they are now normal. The things you say though sound more like a middling case of gut dysbiosis, with focus on fungi. That would in any case trigger mast cells. Our mito cocktail is 2x2gr arginine, 3x500mg L carnitine, 3x100mg ubiquinol, 1x50 c vitamin, 1x100mg R lipo acid, 1x1000mcg methylfolate and once a week some vitamin E.

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  5. Based on your Iga and IGG which is also our case I can say that what worked well for us is IVIG as well.
    Just a correction - we don’t have HSV all over, we have EBV.
    I would also like to add a general statement - I have recently spent a lot of time going down even deeper into the rabbit holes of immune problems (gut or general) and neuroinflammation and I have to say that I don’t think we can expect science to resolve these issues in a ‘so this is why and this is how we fix it’ manner in our lifetime. The system is far to complex and we don’t even have the proper tools to explore some of it. As far as more clear cut things go, like channelopathies or structural problems or specific genetic things, I think we can get there, but not with immunological things.
    So I believe the best thing we can do there is apply things that are smarter than us - I will call them broadly ‘transfers’ - so things such as stem cells, FMT, IVIG - all those therapies where we get biology to do its job, because it knows so much more than we do.

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  6. EDFW I just realized that your doctor probably did not prescribe anything to ward off fungi while you are on Valtrex. Talk to him about it, but also introduce a natural product you can find to begin with, because all the side effects are probably from an activation of fungi.

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  7. Hi Peter, interesting development this year. We spoke to a MCAS Dr in Madrid as to whether my daughters insomnia and related hyperactivity/stereotyping could be MCAS.
    He said he thought it was unlikely but couldn’t rule it out either, so he put her on a antihistamine called Aerius and said if there was no effect then he could rule out MCAS completely.
    Anyway the complete opposite, she is sleeping better than she ever has, 10 nights in a row without waking. And there is noticeable cognitive gains too, however this could just be down to sleeping better.
    Next step is to check tryptase levels both at baseline and when her symptoms arise.
    What I’m wondering is if another bumetanide trial is warranted? From my understanding the link between sleeping and MCAS is that overactive mast cells can block the effect of melatonin, could this also be true of bumetanide?

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  8. Kei, inflammation affects the expression of NKCC1/KCC2 in opposition to bumetanide and so negates the effect.

    You need to resolve the mast cell issues and then try bumetanide again.

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  9. https://www.cell.com/cell-reports/pdf/S2211-1247(22)00211-X.pdf

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  10. Just in case you want to treat elevated p-cresol levels.

    "Should the elevation of p-cresol be found to be a repeatable phenomenon in long-duration spaceflight, as series of pre-mission or in-flight countermeasures warrant consideration. Countermeasure strategies to remediate elevated p-cresol in space that warrant consideration include 1) repletion of the sulfur pool, 2) dietary changes, 3) prebiotics, 4) probiotics, 5) synbiotics, and 6) pre-mission assessment of selected provisional biomarkers coupled with personalized intervention.

    Attention to the sulfur pool should be among the lead considerations in addressing elevated p-cresol. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is the accepted clinical means to treat acetaminophen poisoning in the emergency room setting, as it is known to reliably and rapidly replete the sulfur pool."

    Elevation of Gut-Derived p-Cresol During Spaceflight and its Effect on Drug Metabolism and Performance in Astronauts

    https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.11.10.374645v2.full

    -Stephen

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