Public release date: 2-Apr-2005
Contact: Sarah Goodwin
ebpress@bellsouth.net
770-270-0989
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

Autistic children's abnormal metabolic profile findings
linked to increased oxidative stress and a deficit in antioxidant capacity

Chronic biochemical imbalance is often a primary factor in the development of many complex diseases but a
possible metabolic basis for autism has not been well explored. Now Arkansas Children's Hospital Research
Institute researchers report for the first time that children with autism have a severely abnormal metabolic profile
indicating increased vulnerability to oxidative stress. The scientists also identified a significant increase in the
frequency of several genetic polymorphisms that they believe may increase the risk of autism in specific
combinations yet to be determined.

Dr. S. Jill James, Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine,
presented the study Saturday, April 2, at the American Society for Nutritional Sciences scientific sessions at
Experimental Biology 2005 in San Diego.

Autism is a neurodevelopment disorder characterized by impairment in social interactions, limited language
acquisition, repetitive behaviors, and restricted interests. Usually diagnosed before the age of three, the disorder
appears to have increased tenfold over the last 15 years, now affecting more than 30 of every 10,000 children in
the United States. Although both genetic and environmental factors are believed to contribute to the development
of autism, no firm causal evidence exists. And with no available physiological or biochemical markers, diagnosis
currently is made entirely on a behavioral basis.

Dr. James and colleagues measured plasma levels of the major intracellular antioxidant glutathione and its
metabolic precursors in 95 autistic children and 75 children without autism. Glutathione levels (and also the ratio
of reduced to oxidized glutathione or redox ratio) were significantly decreased in the autistic children, indicating
presence of a significant level of oxidative stress. Oxidative stress occurs when the antioxidant system fails to
counteract the generation or exposure to free radicals. Unopposed free radicals can damage sensitive cells in the
brain, the gastrointestinal tract, and the immune system, and the researchers believe they may contribute to the
neurological, gastrointestinal and immunologic pathology that occurs in autistic children.

Working with a larger number of autistic (360) and non-autistic controls (205), the researchers then looked at
common polymorphisms in genes that could directly or indirectly affect these metabolic pathways and induce
oxidative stress. Three (the catecho-O-methyltransferase gene, the transcobalamin II gene, and the
glutathione-S-transferase M1 gene) were found to be significantly elevated in the autistic children. These genes
are prevalent in the general population, says Dr. James, and clearly do not "cause" autism. However, she and her
colleagues believe specific combinations of these and additional genetic changes could promote the chronic
metabolic imbalance seen in the children and thus increase the risk of the disorder.

The next step, says Dr. James, is to determine whether the metabolic profile discovered by the researchers could
be used as a diagnostic test for autism to support the purely behavioral diagnosis currently in use. It also would
be important, she says, to determine whether the abnormal profile is present in high-risk children, such as toddler
siblings of autistic children and/or toddlers with developmental delays.

Dr. James' coauthors are Dr. Stephan Melnyk and Ms. Stefanie Jernigan in her Biochemical Genetics Laboratory
at Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute and The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.

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