autism Flashcards

1
Q

what is difference between neurodegenerative disease and neuropsychiatric disease

A

in degenerative disease is progressive and nerve cells degenerate and die

in psychiatric disease, disease is mostly not progressive and cells do not degenerate/die

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2
Q

what is the autistic diad

A

what constitutes autism; defects in social interaction

and restricted interests and repetitive behaviours

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3
Q

how is gender related to autism

A

males more commonly affected; 4:1

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4
Q

what are core elements of ASD

A

impaired joint attention, avoids social interaction (happiest playing alone), avoids eye contact, difficulty making friends, difficulty understanding what others are thinking and feeling

restricted and obsessive interests and behaviours characterise ASD (if not present it is not ASD)

strong preference for sameness, repitition and predictability

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5
Q

what are common but variable features of ASD

A

language delay and impairment

various behavioural abnormalities ; eating, sleeping, irritability and tantrums

abnormal motor control

abnormal sensitivity to light

mental retardation

seizures

social regression (most develop normally in first year, 20-30% show dramatic regression in second year), most if not all show some regression

savant skills; are isolated special abilities which involve things such as memory, calculation, drawing, they are common however prodigious savants are ones with extraordinary skills but are rare

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6
Q

how ASD frequency changed over time

A

large increase in ASD frequency recently however this may be accounted for by broadening of diagnostic criteria (to include aspergers), improved diagnosis, increased awareness, reduced stigma and special educational services for ASD children

risk of ASD increases with increased father age, so late parentage may contribute a little

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7
Q

how does postnatal environment contribute to ASD

A

no evidence that postnatal environmental factors increase risk of ASDs

however stresses in utero can increase risk (e.g maternal drugs or infection)

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8
Q

describe genetic factors in ASD

A

identical twins show 80-90% concordance for ASD, non identical twins and siblings show 10-20%

2 types of genetic risk factors for disease; common gene variants/polymorphisms and rare mutations

common gene variants/polymorphism have small effect on risk

rare mutations have big effect on risk, mainly identified as copy number variants

rare mutations include neuroligins and shanks

common variants include CDH9 and CDH10

some forms of autism are caused by single gene mutations; monogenetic syndromic forms, these account for roughly 4% of ASDs and almost all are caused by de novo mutations

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9
Q

what are examples of monogenetic syndromic forms of ASD

A

Rett syndrome; MECP2 gene on X chromosome, encodes a protein that binds to methylated cytosines in DNA, most Rett girls are autistic but also have various other neurological problems

mutant (no MECP2) boys die in first year or 2, in girls X inactivation means that some cells have MECP2 and some dont, girls develop normally and then regress in second year, lose speech, congitive decline and develop autism and motor defects, after regression girls improve a little and live a normal lifespan
rett mouse models; males develop signs at 6 weeks and die by 10 weeks, females develop normally till 4-10 months, then they regress, then improve a little and live a normal lifespan

MeCP2 gene can be knocked out in adult and develop rett-like symptoms, showing it is not developmental

tuberous sclerosis; TSC1 or TSC2 genes, encode a protein complex that inhibits an intracellular signalling pathway, 40% are autistic

fragile X syndrome; FRM1 gene, encodes a protein that regulates protein synthesis at the synapse,30% are autistic

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10
Q

how might mutations in ASD lead to physiological differences

A

decrease in size and number of dendritic spines in ASD

mutations in neuroligin3 or neuroligin4 is associated with autism, these have x-linked genes which encode cell adhesion proteins that act only at synapses, they are required for synapse maturation and normal synaptic function

mutations in NLGN4,NRXN1 and SHANK3 are found in roughly 3% of ASDs

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11
Q

how do the same mutations affect ASD

A

same mutation in same familyt can give either end of ASD spectrum (except monogenetic syndromic types)

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12
Q

how do copy number variants effect ASD

A

copy number variants: changes in number of copies of DNA from expected values (usually 2 alleles), results from deletion or duplication of a relatively large genomic region (containing multiple genes), changes “dosage” of one or more genes which effects disease, rare CNVs are established risk factors for psychiatric disorders

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13
Q

what models are used in ASD research

A

mouse models can be used to determine which cell types, brain areas and synapses and circuits are affected by big effect mutations

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14
Q

how are pluripotent stem cells used in ASD research

A

skin tissue is expanded in vitro, converted to fibroblasts which are reprogrammed into pluripotent stem cells which are converted to neural progenitors via neural induction, which using neural patterning can be used to make forebrain tissue

forebrain tissue can be converted into glutamatergic cortical projection neurones by down regulation of sonic hedgehog or into GABAergic cortical interneurones by upregulation of sonic hedgehog

they are then transplanted into mouse cortex to investigate if they integrate, can they fire APs and do they generate synapses

in phelan mcdermid syndrome neurones have impaired excitatory synaptic transmission, show reduced expression of glutamate receptors and decreased numbers of synapses, reduced SHANK3 expression contributes to these synaptic defects, IGF1 treatment restores excitatory synaptic transmission in PMDS neurones

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