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Showing posts with label Timothy Syndrome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timothy Syndrome. Show all posts

Friday, 28 March 2025

Time for T? Targeting language-associated gene Cntnap2 with a T-type calcium channel blocker corrects hyperexcitability driving sensory abnormalities, repetitive behaviors, and other ASD symptoms, but will it improve language? Will it also benefit Pitt Hopkins syndrome (PTHS) and broader autism?

 


  

Zonisade 100 mg/5 mL oral suspension medicine

 

There are at least 2 Natasas I can think of who will like this post.

Today’s post revisits the subject of calcium channels in autism.  Ion channel dysfunctions are a favourite area of mine because many should be treatable by repurposing safe, existing drugs. I do take note that many readers of this blog have reported success by targeting L-type calcium channels.

Many years ago, at the start of this blog, I recall reading about Timothy syndrome and a researcher at Stanford, Ricardo Dolmetsch, who was exploring treatment using a T-type calcium channel blocker.  It turned out that he had a son with severe autism, which was driving his interest at that time. He won all kinds of awards, but I always wondered why he did not treat his own son.

It is quite strange because Timothy syndrome is caused by a gain of function of an L-type channel. This mutation causes the Cav1.2 channel to fail to inactivate properly after opening. As a result, there is prolonged calcium influx into cells.

Instead of blocking Cav1.2, the researchers blocked the T-channels Cav3.2 and 3.3.

I did my homework on idiopathic autism a dozen years ago and concluded I needed to block Cav1.2. I went ahead and did it – it works like a charm.

It was a real drama back in those days, with self-injury and aggression, so Timothy syndrome and T channels remains stuck in my mind a decade later.

 

Language Genes

Even before parents worry about self-injurious behavior (SIB), they go through the phase of worrying about if their child will ever speak. Some do and some do not.  What really matters is communication, rather than speech.

 

FOXP2 - The language Gene

FOXP2 is a transcription factor involved in the development of neural circuits related to speech and language production, particularly in areas such as the basal ganglia and cerebellum. Mutations in FOXP2 can lead to speech and language deficits.

FOXP2 influences motor control and vocalization processes that are critical for speech, and it is thought to have evolved specifically in humans to support complex language abilities.

 

CNTNAP2 - The language-associated gene

CNTNAP2 (Contactin-associated protein-like 2) is a gene that encodes a cell adhesion protein. It plays a critical role in the development of neural connectivity and the formation of synapses in areas of the brain involved in language, such as the broca’s area and temporal lobes. CNTNAP2 is also involved in the regulation of neuronal excitability and is crucial for the development of white matter tracts that connect language-related brain regions.

Mutations in CNTNAP2 have been implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders such as specific language impairment (SLI), autism, and developmental language disorders.

 

FOXP2 and CNTNAP2 Interaction

FOXP2 and CNTNAP2 work together in the development of the neural circuits that are crucial for language and speech. They are both involved in the formation and maintenance of synaptic connections in key brain regions like the cortex, basal ganglia, and cerebellum, which are critical for motor control, vocalization, and language processing.

There is evidence to suggest that FOXP2 may regulate the expression of CNTNAP2 as part of a broader gene network that governs language development. FOXP2 may influence CNTNAP2 gene expression, which in turn impacts neural connectivity and synaptic function in brain regions responsible for speech and language.

 

CNTNAP2 sounds familiar?

We have come across this gene before.

At least one reader has a child with a mutation in this gene.

We also discovered that the Pitt Hopkins gene TCF4 regulates CNTNAP2 and that

“PTHS (Pitt Hopkins syndrome) is characterised by severe intellectual disability, absent or severely impaired speech, characteristic facial features and epilepsy. Many of these features are shared with patients carrying CNTNAP2 mutations, leading researchers to test patients with PTHS-like features for CNTNAP2 mutations”

Several readers have children with PTHS (Pitt Hopkins syndrome).

It is not inconceivable that what works for CNTNAP2 will also work for at least some PTHS (Pitt Hopkins syndrome).

The question is whether what works for CNTNAP2 will work much more broadly and could it even improve language development?


Here is the recent research from Stanford:

 

Reticular Thalamic Hyperexcitability Drives Autism Spectrum Disorder Behaviors in the Cntnap2 Model of Autism

Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are a group of neurodevelopmental disorders characterized by social communication deficits, repetitive behaviors, and comorbidities such as sensory abnormalities, sleep disturbances, and seizures. Dysregulation of thalamocortical circuits has been implicated in these comorbid features, yet their precise roles in ASD pathophysiology remain elusive. This study focuses on the reticular thalamic nucleus (RT), a key regulator of thalamocortical interactions, to elucidate its contribution to ASD-related behavioral deficits using a Cntnap2 knockout (KO) mouse model. Our behavioral and EEG analyses comparing Cntnap2+/+ and Cntnap2-/- mice demonstrated that Cntnap2 knockout heightened seizure susceptibility, elevated locomotor activity, and produced hallmark ASD phenotypes, including social deficits, and repetitive behaviors. Electrophysiological recordings from thalamic brain slices revealed increased spontaneous and evoked network oscillations with increased RT excitability due to enhanced T-type calcium currents and burst firing. We observed behavior related heightened RT population activity in vivo with fiber photometry. Notably, suppressing RT activity via Z944, a T-type calcium channel blocker, and via C21 and the inhibitory DREADD hM4Di, improved ASD-related behavioral deficits. These findings identify RT hyperexcitability as a mechanistic driver of ASD behaviors and underscore RT as a potential therapeutic target for modulating thalamocortical circuit dysfunction in ASD.

Teaser RT hyperexcitability drives ASD behaviors in Cntnap2-/- mice, highlighting RT as a therapeutic target for circuit dysfunction.

 

Overall, this study identifies elevated RT burst firing and aberrant thalamic oscillatory dynamics in Cntnap2−/− mice as a key driver of ASD-related behavioral deficits. If this is a common mechanism of ASD-circuit pathology arising from a variety of genetic causes, then compounds such as Z944, or subtype specific T-type calcium channel antagonists that would target the Cav3.2 and Cav3.3 expressed in RT neurons, might be an effective therapeutic strategy. Furthermore, future research should focus on elucidating RT’s roles in sensory, emotional, and sleep regulation to optimize therapeutic strategies in the context of ASD.

 

Existing T-type calcium channel blockers for humans

Mibefradil is one of the most well-known T-type calcium channel blockers. It was initially developed for hypertension and angina because of its ability to block T-type channels. However, mibefradil was withdrawn from the market in 1998 due to serious drug interactions with other medications, particularly those that inhibit liver enzymes involved in drug metabolism, like statins.

Despite its withdrawal, mibefradil has been studied for other potential uses, including in epilepsy and chronic pain, due to its effects on neuronal excitability.

Zonisamide is an anticonvulsant medication that has some T-type calcium channel blocking properties. It is approved for epilepsy and partial seizures, but it is not typically used specifically for Timothy syndrome or conditions involving T-type channel dysfunction.

Zonisamide is also used to treat seizures in pet dogs and cats.  


Zonisamide: chemistry, mechanism of action, and pharmacokinetics

Zonisamide is a novel antiepileptic drug (AED) that was developed in search of a less toxic, more effective anticonvulsant. The drug has been used in Japan since 1989, and is effective for simple and complex partial seizures, generalized tonic-clonic seizures, myoclonic epilepsies, Lennox–Gastaut syndrome, and infantile spasms. In Japan, zonisamide is currently indicated for monotherapy and adjunctive therapy for partial onset and generalized onset seizures in adults and children. In the United States, zonisamide was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2000 as an adjunctive treatment for partial seizures.

The drug’s broad spectrum of activity and favorable pharmacokinetic profile offer certain advantages in the epilepsy treatment armamentarium. Chemically distinct from other AEDs, zonisamide has been shown to be effective in patients whose seizures are resistant to other AEDs. Zonisamide’s long plasma elimination half-life has allowed it to be used in a once-daily or twice-daily treatment regimen in Japan.

It is believed that zonisamide’s effect on the propagation of seizure discharges involves blocking the repetitive firing of voltage-sensitive sodium channels, and reducing voltage-sensitive T-type calcium currents without affecting L-type calcium currents. These mechanisms stabilize neuronal membranes and suppress neuronal hypersynchronization, leading to the suppression of partial seizures and generalized tonic–clonic seizures in humans.

Zonisamide possesses mechanisms of action that are similar to those of sodium valproate, e.g., suppression of epileptogenic activity and depression of neuronal responses. These mechanisms are thought to contribute to the suppression of absence and myoclonic seizures.

  

Conclusion

It would seem that zonisamide should be trialed in:

·        CNTNAP2-related neurodevelopmental disorder

·        Pitt Hopkins syndrome (PTHS)

·        Timothy syndrome

·        Idiopathic/polygenic autism

(But, don’t hold your breath!)

Due to the nature of CNTNAP2 disorder and PTHS, I think the greatest impact will be if given from a very young age. However, we do see improvements with many autism interventions regardless of age.

It is certainly conceivable that even mild autism can benefit from damping down reticular thalamic (RT) hyperexcitability.

If shown effective, zonisamide would join the long list of anti-epileptic drugs (AEDs) “repurposable” to treat certain subtypes of autism.





Friday, 2 October 2015

Is dysregulated IP3R calcium signaling a nexus where genes altered in ASD converge to exert their deleterious effect?





Place de l'Étoile in Paris and the avenues radiating from it.  The Arc de Triomphe in the centre would be the IP3 receptor



There are a small number of researchers in the field of autism who really do seem to know what they are talking about;  one of those is Jay Gargus, from University of California at Irvine.  He is one of the few well versed on ion channel dysfunctions (channelopathies).  Today we look at his recent paper relating to the IP3R calcium channel in something called the endoplasmic reticulum (ER).

Gargus’ recent findings relate to calcium signaling, which we have seen previously in this blog to be dysfunctional in autism.  Blocking one type of calcium channel, with Verapamil, has had a remarkable effect in the children of some of those reading this blog; this has included resolving aggressive behavior, resolving GI problems and, most recently, greatly reducing seizures.  An interesting side effect of this drug is that it protects older people from Type 2 diabetes.

We will also encounter yet another kind of stress, ER stress (endoplasmic reticulum stress), which plays a role in many disorders including Type 2 diabetes and is suggested by some Japanese researchers to play a role in autism.  Interestingly some of my pet autism interventions are known to affect ER stress.

As usual in this blog, I will skip some of the complexities, but we do need to know some new words.  The explanation is mainly courtesy of the remarkable Wikipedia.


Organelle

In cell biology, an organelle is a specialized subunit within a cell that has a specific function.  Individual organelles are usually separately enclosed within their own lipid bilayers.  These lipid bilayers are also extremely important and need to be perfectly intact.  It does appear that these lipid bilayers are a little different in autism.











Components of a typical animal cell:

  1.     Nucleolus
  2.     Nucleus
  3.     Ribosome (little dots)
  4.    Vesicle
  5.    Rough endoplasmic reticulum
  6.    Golgi apparatus (or "Golgi body")
  7.    Cytoskeleton
  8.   Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
  9.   Mitochondrion
  10.   Vacuole
  11.   Cytosol (fluid that contains organelles)
  12.    Lysosome
  13.    Centrosome
  14.    Cell membrane



Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) and ER Stress

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the cellular organelle in which protein folding, calcium homeostasis, and lipid biosynthesis occur. Stimuli such as oxidative stress, ischemic insult, disturbances in calcium homeostasis, and enhanced expression of normal and/or folding-defective proteins lead to the accumulation of unfolded proteins, a condition referred to as ER stress.


Inositol trisphosphate receptor (InsP3R) or IP3R

IP3R is a Ca2+ channel activated by inositol trisphosphate (InsP3). InsP3R is very diverse among organisms, and is necessary for the control of cellular and physiological processes including cell division, cell proliferation, apoptosis, fertilization, development, behavior, learning and memory. Inositol triphosphate receptor represents a dominant second messenger leading to the release of Ca2+ from intracellular store sites.

It has a broad tissue distribution but is especially abundant in the cerebellum. Most of the InsP3Rs are found in the cell integrated into the endoplasmic reticulum.


Genes and autism

It is a widely held view that autism is essentially a genetic condition with some environmental triggers.

What is strange is that many hundreds, and later I suspect thousands, of genes are known to be implicated.  Do these lead to thousands of unique dysfunctions that ultimately manifest themselves as what we, rather clumsily, describe as “autism”?  This appears to be unlikely, more likely is that a much smaller number of downstream dysfunctions are involved.  This is behind what is suggested later by Gargus.

What I have always found odd is that siblings with idiopathic autism do NOT generally share the same genetic variations.  Most autism is called idiopathic, which means of unknown cause.  This is why I have not done any genetic testing on my son.

If siblings have Fragile X, then of course they do have the same genetic defect; the brother will likely be much more severely affected than the sister.

It occurs to me that unless the idiopathic autistic siblings live under some high voltage power cables, next to a TV transmitter or a chemical factory, the genetic testing must be missing something.  We have seen that sequencing the exome, the current “ultimate genetic test”, in fact only looks at 5% of genome.  We have also seen that in the remaining 95% are the so called enhancers and silencers of the genes in the exome.  We have also seen that overexpression of a perfect gene (as in Down syndrome) can do as much damage as a faulty gene.

My advice is to look in the remaining 95% of the genome.



Gargus, IP3R and Autism

Having completed the introduction now we can move on to the Gargus paper.

He is suggesting that a dysfunction at a specific calcium channel in the ER may be the common dysfunction triggered by “autism genes”.

So far he has only tested his idea on some single gene autisms, fragile X and tuberous sclerosis.
 





Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects 2% of children, and is characterized by impaired social and communication skills together with repetitive, stereotypic behavior. The pathophysiology of ASD is complex due to genetic and environmental heterogeneity, complicating the development of therapies and making diagnosis challenging. Growing genetic evidence supports a role of disrupted Ca2+ signaling in ASD. Here, we report that patient-derived fibroblasts from three monogenic models of ASD—fragile X and tuberous sclerosis TSC1 and TSC2 syndromes—display depressed Ca2+ release through inositol trisphosphate receptors (IP3Rs). This was apparent in Ca2+ signals evoked by G protein-coupled receptors and by photoreleased IP3 at the levels of both global and local elementary Ca2+ events, suggesting fundamental defects in IP3R channel activity in ASD. Given the ubiquitous involvement of IP3R-mediated Ca2+ signaling in neuronal excitability, synaptic plasticity, gene expression and neurodevelopment, we propose dysregulated IP3R signaling as a nexus where genes altered in ASD converge to exert their deleterious effect. These findings highlight potential pharmaceutical targets, and identify Ca2+ screening in skin fibroblasts as a promising technique for early detection of individuals susceptible to ASD.


This part I found interesting:-

Because of the ubiquitous nature of IP3R signaling and its diverse roles in almost all cells of the body, deficits in IP3-mediated Ca2+ signaling may not be limited to neurological correlates of ASD, but may also explain other characteristic ASD-associated heterogeneous symptoms, such as those of the gastrointestinal tract and immune system.  Furthermore, since the ER serves as a sensor of a host of environmental stressors, this same mechanism may contribute to the known environmental component
to the ASD phenotype, and holds the potential to reveal relevant stressors.

Is it a coincidence that the Verapamil therapy I propose also benefits autism symptoms linked to the gastrointestinal tract and immune system (mast cells/allergy) and also now seizures (hyper excitability)?  I think not,



Here is the rather easier to read press release from the University:-

UCI researchers find biomarker for autism that may aid diagnostics




Irvine, Calif., Sept. 22, 2015 — By identifying a key signaling defect within a specific membrane structure in all cells, University of California, Irvine researchers believe, they have found both a possible reliable biomarker for diagnosing certain forms of autism and a potential therapeutic target.

Dr. J. Jay Gargus, Ian Parker and colleagues at the UCI Center for Autism Research & Translation examined skin biopsies of patients with three very different genetic types of the disorder (fragile X syndrome and tuberous sclerosis 1 and 2). They discovered that a cellular calcium signaling process involving the inositol trisphosphate receptor was very much altered.

This IP3R functional defect was located in the endoplasmic reticulum, which is among the specialized membrane compartments in cells called organelles, and may underpin cognitive impairments – and possibly digestive and immune problems – associated with autism.

“We believe this finding will be another arrow in the quiver for early and accurate diagnoses of autism spectrum disorders,” said Gargus, director of the Center for Autism Research & Translation and professor of pediatrics and physiology & biophysics. “Equally exciting, it also presents a target of a molecular class already well-established to be useful for drug discovery.”

Study results appear online in Translational Psychiatry, a Nature publication.

Autism spectrum disorder is a range of complex neurodevelopmental disorders affecting 2 percent of U.S. children. The social and economic burden of ASD is enormous, currently estimated at more than $66 billion per year in the U.S. alone. Drug development has proven problematic due to the limited understanding of the underlying causes of ASD, as demonstrated by the recent failure of several much anticipated drug trials.

There are also no current, reliable diagnostic biomarkers for ASD. Genetic research has identified hundreds of genes that are involved, which impedes diagnosis and, ultimately, drug development. There simply may be too many targets, each with too small an effect.

Many of these genes associated with ASD, however, have been found to be part of the same signaling pathway, and multiple defects in this pathway may converge to produce a large functional change.

The UCI scientists detected such a convergence in the IP3R calcium channel in an organelle called the endoplasmic reticulum. Organelles are membrane structures within cells with specialized cellular functions. According to Gargus, diseases of the organelles, such as the ER, are an emerging field in medicine, with several well-recognized neurological ailments linked to two other ones, the mitochondria and lysosomes.

The IP3R controls the release of calcium from the ER. In the brain, calcium is used to communicate information within and between neurons, and it activates a host of other cell functions, including ones regulating learning and memory, neuronal excitability and neurotransmitter release – areas known to be dysfunctional in ASD.
“We propose that the proper function of this channel and its signaling pathway is critical for normal performance of neurons and that this signaling pathway represents a key ‘hub’ in the pathogenesis of ASD,” said Parker, a fellow of London’s Royal Society and UCI professor of neurobiology & behavior, who studies cellular calcium signaling.

To see if IP3R function is altered across the autism spectrum, clinical researchers at The Center for Autism & Neurodevelopmental Disorders – which is affiliated with the Center for Autism Research & Translation – are currently expanding the study and have begun to examine children with and without typical ASD for the same signaling abnormalities. These patients undergo complete behavioral diagnostic testing, and sophisticated EEG, sleep and biochemical studies are performed. This includes the sequencing of their entire genome. Also, skin cell samples are cultured and made available to lab-based researchers for functional assays.

In the area of drug discovery, scientists at the Center for Autism Research & Translation continue to probe the IP3R channel, specifically how it regulates the level of neuron excitability. The brains of people who have autism show signs of hyperexcitability, which is also seen in epilepsy, a disorder increasingly found to be associated with ASD. Cells from individuals who have autism exhibit depressed levels of calcium signaling, and this might explain why these patients experience this hyperexcitability. By restoring the release of calcium from the IP3R, the researchers believe, they can apply a “brake” on this activity.




ER Stress

As we saw above, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the cellular organelle in which protein folding, calcium homeostasis, and lipid biosynthesis occur. Stimuli such as oxidative stress, ischemic insult, disturbances in calcium homeostasis, and enhanced expression of normal and/or folding-defective proteins lead to the accumulation of unfolded proteins, a condition referred to as ER stress.
We know that we usually have oxidative stress in autism and we know that calsium homeostasis is disturbed, so it is not surprising if we found ER stress in autism.

The following paper is not open access but it does suggest that ER stress leads to impaired synaptic function and specifically GABAB dysfunction.  If you respond well to Baclofen, you likely have a GABAB dysfunction.  Based on anecdotal evidence I would suggest that people with Asperger’s and anxiety might well have ER stress, since they are the ones that respond well to baclofen.




The molecular pathogenesis of ASD (autism spectrum disorder), one of the heritable neurodevelopmental disorders, is not well understood, although over 15 autistic-susceptible gene loci have been extensively studied. A major issue is whether the proteins that these candidate genes encode are involved in general function and signal transduction. Several mutations in genes encoding synaptic adhesion molecules such as neuroligin, neurexin, CNTNAP (contactin-associated protein) and CADM1 (cell-adhesion molecule 1) found in ASD suggest that impaired synaptic function is the underlying pathogenesis. However, knockout mouse models of these mutations do not show all of the autism-related symptoms, suggesting that gain-of-function in addition to loss-of-function arising from these mutations may be associated with ASD pathogenesis. Another finding is that family members with a given mutation frequently do not manifest autistic symptoms, which possibly may be because of gender effects, dominance theory and environmental factors, including hormones and stress. Thus epigenetic factors complicate our understanding of the relationship between these mutated genes and ASD pathogenesis. We focus in the present review on findings that ER (endoplasmic reticulum) stress arising from these mutations causes a trafficking disorder of synaptic receptors, such as GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) B-receptors, and leads to their impaired synaptic function and signal transduction. In the present review we propose a hypothesis that ASD pathogenesis is linked not only to loss-of-function but also to gain-of-function, with an ER stress response to unfolded proteins under the influence of epigenetic factors.



I was surprised how much is known about ER stress, there is even a scientific journal devoted to it.

As is often the case, the literature is again full papers like the one below suggesting something, ER stress in this case, is a good drug target, but then do not suggest any drugs.





Abstract
Cardiovascular disease constitutes a major and increasing health burden in developed countries. Although treatments have progressed, the development of novel treatments for patients with cardiovascular diseases remains a major research goal. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the cellular organelle in which protein folding, calcium homeostasis, and lipid biosynthesis occur. Stimuli such as oxidative stress, ischemic insult, disturbances in calcium homeostasis, and enhanced expression of normal and/or folding-defective proteins lead to the accumulation of unfolded proteins, a condition referred to as ER stress. ER stress triggers the unfolded protein response (UPR) to maintain ER homeostasis. The UPR involves a group of signal transduction pathways that ameliorate the accumulation of unfolded protein by increasing ER-resident chaperones, inhibiting protein translation and accelerating the degradation of unfolded proteins. The UPR is initially an adaptive response but, if unresolved, can lead to apoptotic cell death. Thus, the ER is now recognized as an important organelle in deciding cell life and death. There is compelling evidence that the adaptive and proapoptotic pathways of UPR play fundamental roles in the development and progression of cardiovascular diseases, including heart failure, ischemic heart diseases, and atherosclerosis. Thus, therapeutic interventions that target molecules of the UPR component and reduce ER stress will be promising strategies to treat cardiovascular diseases. In this review, we summarize the recent progress in understanding UPR signaling in cardiovascular disease and its related therapeutic potential. Future studies may clarify the most promising molecules to be investigated as targets for cardiovascular diseases.


However all is not lost, a little digging uncovers several existing substances that affect ER Stress.

Atorvastatin, long part of my autism Polypill, is quite prominent.  Atorvastatin is lipophilic statin, which means it can better cross the blood brain barrier.  By chance it is the statin with the least side effects.




Statins inhibit HMG-CoA reductase, target mevalonic acid synthesis, and limit cholesterol biosynthesis. HMG-CoA reductase is expressed in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Statins are prescribed to prevent cardiovascular events.
In cultured neonatal mouse cardiac myocytes the lipophilic statin atorvastatin and the hydrophilic statin pravastatin both up-regulated PDI, indicating unfolded protein response (UPR) meant to relieve ER stress. Only atorvastatin increased ER stress, growth arrest, and induced apoptosis via induction of CHOP, Puma, active Caspase-3 and PARP. Dose-dependent release of LDH was only observed in atorvastatin treated cells (1–10 μM). Hearts of mice treated with atorvastatin (5mg/kg/day for 7 months) showed protein aggresomes and autophagosomes when compared to vehicle treated controls. While atorvastatin changed mitochondrial ultrastructure, no differences in cardiac function, exercise ability or creatine kinase levels were found.
We show differential activation of ER stress by atorvastatin and pravastatin in cardiac myocytes. Our results provide a novel mechanism through which specific statins therapeutically modulate the balance of UPR/ER stress responses thereby possibly influencing cardiac remodeling.






Cerebral ischemia triggers secondary ischemia/reperfusion injury and endoplasmic reticulum stress initiates cell apoptosis. However, the regulatory mechanism of the signaling pathway remains unclear. We hypothesize that the regulatory mechanisms are mediated by the protein kinase-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase/eukaryotic initiation factor 2α in the endoplasmic reticulum stress signaling pathway. To verify this hypothesis, we occluded the middle cerebral artery in rats to establish focal cerebral ischemia/reperfusion model. Results showed that the expression levels of protein kinase-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase and caspase-3, as well as the phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor 2α, were increased after ischemia/reperfusion. Administration of atorvastatin decreased the expression of protein kinase-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase, caspase-3 and phosphorylated eukaryotic initiation factor 2α, reduced the infarct volume and improved ultrastructure in the rat brain. After salubrinal, the specific inhibitor of phosphorylated eukaryotic initiation factor 2α was given into the rats intragastrically, the expression levels of caspase-3 and phosphorylated eukaryotic initiation factor 2α in the were decreased, a reduction of the infarct volume and less ultrastructural damage were observed than the untreated, ischemic brain. However, salubrinal had no impact on the expression of protein kinase-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase. Experimental findings indicate that atorvastatin inhibits endoplasmic reticulum stress and exerts neuroprotective effects. The underlying mechanisms of attenuating ischemia/reperfusion injury are associated with the protein kinase-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase/eukaryotic initiation factor 2α/caspase-3 pathway.





ABSTRACT
The nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPAR-γ) is an important target in diabetes therapy, but its direct role, if any, in the restoration of islet function has remained controversial. To identify potential molecular mechanisms of PPAR-γ in the islet, we treated diabetic or glucose-intolerant mice with the PPAR-γ agonist pioglitazone or with a control. Treated mice exhibited significantly improved glycemic control, corresponding to increased serum insulin and enhanced glucose-stimulated insulin release and Ca2+ responses from isolated islets in vitro. This improved islet function was at least partially attributed to significant upregulation of the islet genes Irs1, SERCA, Ins1/2, and Glut2 in treated animals. The restoration of the Ins1/2 and Glut2 genes corresponded to a two- to threefold increase in the euchromatin marker histone H3 dimethyl-Lys4 at their respective promoters and was coincident with increased nuclear occupancy of the islet methyltransferase Set7/9. Analysis of diabetic islets in vitro suggested that these effects resulting from the presence of the PPAR-γ agonist may be secondary to improvements in endoplasmic reticulum stress. Consistent with this possibility, incubation of thapsigargin-treated INS-1 β cells with the PPAR-γ agonist resulted in the reduction of endoplasmic reticulum stress and restoration of Pdx1 protein levels and Set7/9 nuclear occupancy. We conclude that PPAR-γ agonists exert a direct effect in diabetic islets to reduce endoplasmic reticulum stress and enhance Pdx1 levels, leading to favorable alterations of the islet gene chromatin architecture.


PPAR-γ agonist pioglitazone is known to have a positive effect in some autism, but it does have side effects.

Other PPAR-γ agonists include Ibuprofen and Tangeretin (sold as Sytrinol).

ER stress plays a key role in diabetes and some obesity.









Conclusion

So as to Gargus’ question and the tittle of this post:

Is dysregulated IP3R calcium signaling a nexus where genes altered in ASD converge to exert their deleterious effect?

The researchers are now looking at children with and without idiopathic autism to see if dysregulated IP3R calcium is indeed a reliable marker.

Given so many things can lead to behavior diagnosed as autism, I think they will just identify an IP3R cluster.  Hopefully it is a big one.  Then they can find a therapy to  release calcium from IP3R.

Where does ER stress fit into this picture?  Gargus briefly mentions stressors and unfolded protein responses:-

In addition to its role in Ca2+ homeostasis, the ER serves as a key integrator of environmental stressors with metabolism and gene expression, as it mediates a host of broad ranging cell stress responses such as the heat shock and unfolded protein responses

I think he is missing something here. 

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the cellular organelle in which lipid biosynthesis occurs as well as protein folding and calcium homeostasis.

I suspect all three may be dysfunctional.  We have ample evidence of lipid abnormalities in autism and even lipid bilayer abnormalities. The Japanese research referred to above suggests protein folding dysfunction.  Note that what reduces ER stress (statins and tangeretin) also reduces cholesterol.

The good news is that plenty of therapeutic avenues already exist.

The other good news is that after 261 posts of this blog, so many pieces of the autism puzzle seem to be fitting together, not perfectly, but well enough to figure out how to treat multiple aspects of classic autism.

I did stumble across a recent quote by Ricardo Dolmetsch, formerly of Stanford and currently Global Head of Neuroscience at drug maker Novartis.  He also has a son with classic autism.  He was quoted again saying there are currently no drug treatments for core autism.  He knows a thousand times more about biology than me, but he is totally wrong to keep saying that there is nothing you can do beyond behavioral education and, if that fails, institutionalization.  I did write to him a while back and I do feel rather sorry for him, since it was his research on Timothy Syndrome that indirectly led to my Verapamil “discovery”.

Some people are just too clever (him, not me).





Friday, 29 August 2014

Just How Rare are the Known Genetic Causes of Autism?


"Gene" by Courtesy: National Human Genome Research

As we have seen so far in this blog, a great deal is already known about various causes of autism.  It is claimed that only 5-8% of cases are caused by the mutation of a single gene, as in Fragile-X and Retts syndrome.

When I was researching the new drug Arbaclofen, that was being trialed as a therapy for Fragile-X, and autism in general, I was surprised to learn that within Fragile-X there is a wide spectrum.  Some people are very severely affected, both mentally and physically and others are quite mildly affected.

It turns out the same spectrum effect applies to other known genetic causes of autism, including NeurofibromatosisTuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC) and Timothy Syndrome.

We also have the case of Anderson-Tawil syndrome, which was drawn to my attention by a reader of this blog.  This, supposedly extremely rare, syndrome appears to run in families with a high incidence of autism.  Some of the symptoms do overlap with autism.  As with Fragile X, there can be visible physical differences.  The reader informed us that sufferers are often initially misdiagnosed with Fibromyalgia.  This blog did already look at Fibromyalgia, which also seems to run in families where autism is present and particularly affects females.  Doctors tend to diagnose Fibromyalgia when they cannot identify any other cause of the patient’s reported aches and pains, and they want to put an end to the matter.


Further Observations

There is a general perception that people with autism “look different” and I do not mean just act differently, or walk funny.
Indeed, one of the things those rare doctors specialized in autism look for, is a big head (Macrocephaly) as an indicator of possible autism and possible MR.

When Monty, aged 11 with ASD, went to visit the parents of his afternoon assistant, who is a special educator in training, there was an unexpected, but interesting comment:-  “he looks normal”.

I was recently discussing my blog with a relative who works for the UK National Health Service (NHS).  I was asking why children diagnosed with autism were not routinely screened for known genetic causes, like Retts, Fragile-X etc.  I suggested that perhaps if more people were screened, we would find that these “rare” conditions might be more common that we think.


What the Science Tells Us

Since this blog is supposed to be based on science, let’s go see what those clever scientists can tell us.

It pretty much fits in with what I am saying.  They have a new term, “Mendelian diseases” – diseases caused by a single gene.

The Broad Institute (Ivy League types) has found that milder forms of otherwise severe “Mendelian” diseases can be found in autism.  Only a partially-disabling mutation has occurred in those genes.
  


One study, led by Mark Daly, a senior associate member of the Broad and co-director of its Medical and Population Genetics program, found that approximately 5% of autism cases could be linked to inherited, recessive mutations that completely disrupt gene function. A second study, led by Broad associate member Christopher A. Walsh, found that autism risk could also be attributed to inherited mutations that resulted in only a partial loss of gene function. Moreover, Walsh’s team found that many of these partially-disabling mutations occurred in genes in which a complete disruption of the gene has been known to cause more severe or even fatal inherited diseases. This suggests that milder forms of some severe, Mendelian diseases – diseases caused by a single gene – may present as autism spectrum disorders.




Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC), as an example

An example of a known genetic mutation leading to autism is Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC).

TSC is caused by a mutation of either of two genes, TSC1 and TSC2, which code for the proteins hamartin and tuberin respectively. These proteins act as tumor growth suppressors, agents that regulate cell proliferation and differentiation.
The graphic below shows the symptoms of TSC and the age at which they tend to present themselves.
  



Source: Wikipedia


The symptom that caught my attention was “Facial angiofibromas”, since these little marks on the face can be easily noticed, if you look at people when you talk to them.

These marks tend to make a butterfly shaped pattern on the face and vary from highly noticeable to nearly invisible,

Here is an example from Wikipedia:-





In the case of Fragile X, prominent characteristics of the syndrome may include an elongated face, large or protruding ears, and low muscle tone.



Why does this matter?

If you are a parent, don’t go worrying about a new syndrome to deal with.

As time goes by, certain types of autism will eventually be matched to effective drug therapies.  So it makes sense to know who is mildly affected by these single-gene disorders, as well as those with the full-blown version, only some of whom have already been diagnosed.

So, if you are mildly TSC, you would follow the TSC research and if you have low muscle tone and a long face, then the forthcoming Fragile X therapies could be relevant.

Since genetic testing is extremely uncommon, the logical way to go is to look at the outward symptoms of these conditions, starting with the very obvious ones.

I do not know many people with autism, but even I can notice some tell-tale physical features, once you know what to look for. As these features are inherited, the physical manifestation may be more visible in siblings, even though the behavioural symptoms are absent.

So those single gene disorders may not be as rare as we thought.