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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There has been little exploration of major biologic regulators of cerebral development in
autism
. In archived neonatal blood of children with autistic spectrum disorders (n = 69), mental retardation without
autism
(n = 60), or cerebral palsy (CP, n = 63) and of control children (n = 54), we used recycling immunoaffinity chromatography to measure the neuropeptides substance P (SP), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and the neurotrophins nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), neurotrophin 3 (NT3), and neurotrophin 4/5 (NT4/5). Neonatal concentrations of
VIP
, CGRP, BDNF, and NT4/5 were higher (ANOVA, all p values < 0.0001 by Scheffe test for pairwise differences) in children in the autistic spectrum and in those with mental retardation without
autism
than in control children. In 99% of children with
autism
and 97% with mental retardation, levels of at least one of these substances exceeded those of all control children. Concentrations were similar in subgroups of the autistic spectrum (core syndrome with or without mental retardation, other autistic spectrum disorders with or without mental retardation) and in the presence or absence of a history of regression. Among children with mental retardation, concentrations did not differ by severity or known cause (n = 11, including 4 with Down syndrome). Concentrations of measured substances were similar in children with CP as compared with control subjects. SP, PACAP, NGF, and NT3 were not different by diagnostic group. No measured analyte distinguished children with
autism
from children with mental retardation alone. In
autism
and in a heterogeneous group of disorders of cognitive function, overexpression of certain neuropeptides and neurotrophins was observed in peripheral blood drawn in the first days of life.
...
PMID:Neuropeptides and neurotrophins in neonatal blood of children with autism or mental retardation. 1135 50
Secretin is a gastrointestinal peptide belonging to the vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)/glucagon/pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) family recently suggested to have therapeutic effects in
autism
. A direct effect on brain would require secretin to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB), an ability other members of the
VIP
/PACAP family have. Herein, we examined whether a secretin analog (SA) radioactively labeled with (131)I (I-SA) could cross the BBB of 4-week-old mice. We found I-SA was rapidly cleared from serum with fragments not precipitating with acid appearing in brain and serum. Levels of radioactivity were corrected to reflect only intact I-SA as estimated by acid precipitation. After i.v. injection, I-SA was taken up by brain at a modest rate of 0.9 to 1.5 microl/g-mm. Capillary depletion, brain perfusion, and high-performance liquid chromatography were used to confirm the passage of intact I-SA across the BBB. I-SA entered every brain region, with the highest uptake into the hypothalamus and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Unlabeled SA (10 microg/mouse) did not inhibit uptake by brain but did inhibit clearance from blood and uptake by the CSF, colon, kidney, and liver. The decreased clearance of I-SA from blood increased the percentage of the i.v. injected dose taken up per brain (%Inj/g) from about 0.118 to 0.295%Inj/g. In conclusion, SA crosses the vascular barrier by a nonsaturable process and the choroid plexus by a saturable process in amounts that for other members of its family produce central nervous system (CNS) effects. This passage provides a pathway through which peripherally administered SA could affect the CNS.
...
PMID:Differential transport of a secretin analog across the blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal fluid barriers of the mouse. 1218 64
The most common genetic cause of mental retardation is Down syndrome, trisomy of chromosome 21, which is accompanied by small stature, developmental delays, and mental retardation. In the Ts65Dn segmental trisomy mouse model of Down syndrome, the section of mouse chromosome 16 most homologous to human chromosome 21 is trisomic. This model exhibits aspects of Down syndrome including growth restriction, delay in achieving developmental milestones, and cognitive dysfunction. Recent data link
vasoactive intestinal peptide
malfunction with developmental delays and cognitive deficits. Blockage of
vasoactive intestinal peptide
during rodent development results in growth and developmental delays, neuronal dystrophy, and, in adults, cognitive dysfunction. Also,
vasoactive intestinal peptide
is elevated in the blood of newborn children with
autism
and Down syndrome. In the current experiments,
vasoactive intestinal peptide
binding sites were significantly increased in several brain areas of the segmental trisomy mouse, including the olfactory bulb, hippocampus, cortex, caudate/putamen, and cerebellum, compared with wild-type littermates. In situ hybridization for VIP mRNA revealed significantly more dense
vasoactive intestinal peptide
mRNA in the hippocampus, cortex, raphe nuclei, and vestibular nuclei in the segmental trisomy mouse compared with wild-type littermates. In the segmental trisomy mouse cortex and hippocampus, over three times as many
vasoactive intestinal peptide
-immunopositive cells were visible than in wild-type mouse cortex. These abnormalities in
vasoactive intestinal peptide
parameters in the segmental trisomy model of Down syndrome suggest that
vasoactive intestinal peptide
may have a role in the neuropathology of Down-like cognitive dysfunction.
...
PMID:Vasoactive intestinal peptide in the brain of a mouse model for Down syndrome. 1295 88
In recent years,
VIP
/PACAP/secretin family has special interest. Family members are vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), secretin, glucagon, glucagon like peptide-1 (GLP(1)), GLP(2), gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP), growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH or GRF), and peptide histidine methionine (PHM). Most of the family members present both in central nervous system (CNS) and in various peripheral tissues. The family members that are released into blood from periphery, especially gut, circulate the brain and they can cross the blood brain barrier. On the other hand, some of the members of this family that present in the brain, can cross from brain to blood and reach the peripheral targets.
VIP
, secretin, GLP(1), and PACAP 27 are transported into the brain by transmembrane diffusion, a non-saturable mechanism. However, uptake of PACAP 38 into the brain is saturable mechanism. While there is no report for the passage of GIP, GLP(2), and PHM, there is only one report that shows, glucagon and GHRH can cross the BBB. The passage of
VIP
/PACAP/secretin family members opens up new horizon for understanding of CNS effects of peripherally administrated peptides. There is much hope that those peptides may prove to be useful in the treatment of serious neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, amyotropic lateral sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, AIDS related neuropathy, diabetic neuropathy,
autism
, stroke and nerve injury. Their benefits in various pathophysiologic conditions undoubtly motivate the development of a novel drug design for future therapeutics.
...
PMID:Passage of VIP/PACAP/secretin family across the blood-brain barrier: therapeutic effects. 1513 84
1. This study aims (1) to determine whether secretin is synthesized centrally, specifically by the HPA axis and (2) to discuss, on the basis of the findings in this and previous studies, secretin's possible neuroregulatory role in
autism
. 2. An immunocytochemical technique with single-cell resolution was performed in 12 age/weight-matched male rats pretreated with stereotaxic microinjection of colchicine (0.6 microg/kg) or vehicle into the lateral ventricle. Following 2-day survival, rats were anesthetized and perfused for immunocytochemistry. Brain segments were blocked and alternate frozen 30-microm sections incubated in rabbit antibodies against secretin,
vasoactive intestinal peptide
, glucagon, or pituitary-adenylate-cyclase-activating peptide. Adjacent sections were processed for Nissl stain. Preadsorption studies were performed with members of the secretin peptide family to demonstrate primary antibody specificity. 3. Specificity of secretin immunoreactivity (ir) was verified by clear-cut preadsorption control data and relatively high concentrations and distinct topographic localization of secretin ir to paraventricular/supraoptic and intercalated hypothalamic nuclei. Secretin levels were upregulated by colchicine, an exemplar of homeostatic stressors, as compared with low constitutive expression in untreated rats. 4. This study provides the first direct immunocytochemical demonstration of secretinergic immunoreactivity in the forebrain and offers evidence that the hypothalamus, like the gut, is capable of synthesizing secretin. Secretin's dual expression by gut and brain secretin cells, as well as its overlapping central distribution with other stress-adaptation neurohormones, especially oxytocin, indicates that it is stress-sensitive. A neuroregulatory relationship between the peripheral and central stress response systems is suggested, as is a dual role for secretin in conditioning both of those stress-adaptation systems. Colchicine-induced upregulation of secretin indicates that secretin may be synthesized on demand in response to stress, a possible mechanism of action that may underlie secretin's role in
autism
.
...
PMID:Secretin: hypothalamic distribution and hypothesized neuroregulatory role in autism. 1517 37
Blockage of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) receptors during early embryogenesis in the mouse has been shown to result in developmental delays in neonates, and social behavior deficits selectively in adult male offspring. Offspring of
VIP
deficient mothers (
VIP
+/-) also exhibited developmental delays, and reductions in maternal affiliation and play behavior. In the current study, comparisons among the offspring of
VIP
deficient mothers (
VIP
+/-) mated to
VIP
+/- males with the offspring of wild type (WT) mothers mated to
VIP
+/- males allowed assessment of the contributions of both maternal and offspring
VIP
genotype to general health measures, social behavior, fear conditioning, and spatial learning and memory in the water maze. These comparisons revealed few differences in general health among offspring of WT and
VIP
deficient mothers, and all offspring exhibited normal responses in fear conditioning and in the acquisition phase of spatial discrimination in the water maze. WT mothers produced offspring that were normal in all tests; the reduced
VIP
in their
VIP
+/- offspring apparently did not contribute to any defects in the measures under study. However, regardless of their own
VIP
genotype, all male offspring of
VIP
deficient mothers exhibited severe deficits in social approach behavior and reversal learning. The deficits in these behaviors in the female offspring of
VIP
deficient mothers were less severe than in their male littermates, and the extent of their impairment was related to their own
VIP
genotype. This study has shown that intrauterine conditions had a greater influence on behavioral outcome than did genetic inheritance. In addition, the greater prevalence of deficits in social behavior and the resistance to change seen in reversal learning in the male offspring of
VIP
deficient mothers indicate a potential usefulness of the
VIP
knockout mouse in furthering the understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders such as
autism
.
...
PMID:Deficits in social behavior and reversal learning are more prevalent in male offspring of VIP deficient female mice. 1831 78
Pharmacological studies indicate that vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) may be necessary for normal embryonic development in the mouse. For example,
VIP
antagonist treatment before embryonic day 11 resulted in developmental delays, growth restriction, modified adult brain chemistry and reduced social behavior. Here, developmental milestones, growth, and social behaviors of neonates of
VIP
-deficient mothers (
VIP
+/-) mated to
VIP
+/- males were compared with the offspring of wild type mothers (
VIP
+/+) mated to
VIP
+/+ and +/- males, to assess the contributions of both maternal and offspring
VIP
genotype. Regardless of their own genotype, all offsprings of
VIP
-deficient mothers exhibited developmental delays. No delays were seen in the offspring of wild type mothers, regardless of their own genotype. Body weights were significantly reduced in offspring of
VIP
-deficient mothers, with
VIP
null (-/-) the most affected. Regardless of genotype, all offspring of
VIP
-deficient mothers expressed reduced maternal affiliation compared with wild type offspring of wild type mothers; +/- offspring of wild type mothers did not differ in maternal affiliation from their wild type littermates. Play behavior was significantly reduced in all offsprings of
VIP
-deficient mothers. Maternal behavior did not differ between wild type and
VIP
-deficient mothers, and cross-fostering of litters did not change offspring development, indicating that offspring deficits were induced prenatally. This study illustrated that the
VIP
status of a pregnant mouse had a greater influence on the growth, development and behavior of her offspring than the
VIP
genotype of the offspring themselves. Deficiencies were apparent in +/+, +/- and -/- offspring born to
VIP
-deficient mothers; no deficiencies were apparent in +/- offspring born to normal mothers. These results underscore the significant contribution of the uterine environment to normal development and indicate a potential usefulness of the
VIP
knockout mouse in furthering the understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders with social behavior deficits such as
autism
.
...
PMID:Regardless of genotype, offspring of VIP-deficient female mice exhibit developmental delays and deficits in social behavior. 1842 45
Recent research and clinical data have begun to demonstrate the huge potential therapeutic importance of ligands that modulate the activity of the secretin-like, Class II, G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Ligands that can modulate the activity of these Class II GPCRs may have important clinical roles in the treatment of a wide variety of conditions such as osteoporosis, diabetes, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and
autism
spectrum disorders. While these receptors present important new therapeutic targets, the large glycoprotein nature of their cognate ligands poses many problems with respect to therapeutic peptidergic drug design. These native peptides often exhibit poor bioavailability, metabolic instability, poor receptor selectivity and resultant low potencies in vivo. Recently, increased attention has been paid to the structural modification of these peptides to enhance their therapeutic efficacy. Successful modification strategies have included d-amino acid substitutions, selective truncation, and fatty acid acylation of the peptide. Through these and other processes, these novel peptide ligand analogs can demonstrate enhanced receptor subtype selectivity, directed signal transduction pathway activation, resistance to proteolytic degradation, and improved systemic bioavailability. In the future, it is likely, through additional modification strategies such as addition of circulation-stabilizing transferrin moieties, that the therapeutic pharmacopeia of drugs targeted towards Class II secretin-like receptors may rival that of the Class I rhodopsin-like receptors that currently provide the majority of clinically used GPCR-based therapeutics. Currently, Class II-based drugs include synthesized analogs of
vasoactive intestinal peptide
for type 2 diabetes or parathyroid hormone for osteoporosis.
...
PMID:Chemical modification of class II G protein-coupled receptor ligands: frontiers in the development of peptide analogs as neuroendocrine pharmacological therapies. 1968 75
Gene therapies for neurological diseases with autonomic or gastrointestinal involvement may require global gene expression. Gastrointestinal complications are often associated with Parkinson's disease and
autism
. Lewy bodies, a pathological hallmark of Parkinson's brains, are routinely identified in the neurons of the enteric nervous system (ENS) following colon biopsies from patients. The ENS is the intrinsic nervous system of the gut, and is responsible for coordinating the secretory and motor functions of the gastrointestinal tract. ENS dysfunction can cause severe patient discomfort, malnourishment, or even death as in intestinal pseudo-obstruction (Ogilvie syndrome). Importantly, ENS transduction following systemic vector administration has not been thoroughly evaluated. Here we show that systemic injection of AAV9 into neonate or juvenile mice results in transduction of 25-57% of ENS myenteric neurons. Transgene expression was prominent in choline acetyltransferase positive cells, but not within
vasoactive intestinal peptide
or neuronal nitric oxide synthase cells, suggesting a bias for cells involved in excitatory signaling. AAV9 transduction in enteric glia is very low compared to CNS astrocytes. Enteric glial transduction was enhanced by using a glial specific promoter. Furthermore, we show that AAV8 results in comparable transduction in neonatal mice to AAV9 though AAV1, 5, and 6 are less efficient. These data demonstrate that systemic AAV9 has high affinity for peripheral neural tissue and is useful for future therapeutic development and basic studies of the ENS.
...
PMID:Intravenous AAV9 efficiently transduces myenteric neurons in neonate and juvenile mice. 2536 81
ADNP is a protein necessary for brain development, important for brain plasticity, cognitive and social functioning, characteristics that are all impaired in
autism
and in the Adnp(+/-) mouse model, in a sex-dependent manner. ADNP was originally discovered as a protein that is secreted from glial cells in response to vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP).
VIP
is a major neuroprotective peptide in the CNS and PNS and was also associated with social recognition in rodents and aggression, pair-bonding and parental behaviors in birds. Comparative sequence alignment revealed high evolutionary conservation of ADNP in Chordata. Despite its importance in brain function, ADNP has never been studied in birds. Zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) are highly social songbirds that have a sexually dichotomous anatomical brain structure, with males demonstrating a developed song system, presenting a model to study behavior and potential sexually dependent fundamental differences. Here, using quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), we discovered sexually dichotomous and age related differences in ADNP mRNA expression in three different regions of the song bird brain-cerebellum, cerebrum, and brain stem. Higher levels of ADNP mRNA were specifically found in young male compared to the female cerebrum, while aging caused a significant 2 and 3-fold decrease in the female and male cerebrum, respectively. Furthermore, a comparison between the three tested brain regions revealed unique sex-dependent ADNP mRNA distribution patterns, affected by aging. Future studies are aimed at deciphering the function of ADNP in birds, toward a better molecular understanding of sexual dichotomy in singing behavior in birds.
...
PMID:ADNP: A major autism mutated gene is differentially distributed (age and gender) in the songbird brain. 2589 53
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