The New York Times / August 25, 2012 /op-ed

An Immune Disorder at the Root of Autism

By MOISES VELASQUEZ-MANOFF

IN recent years, scientists have made extraordinary advances in
understanding the causes of autism, now estimated to afflict 1 in 88
children. But remarkably little of this understanding has percolated
into popular awareness, which often remains fixated on vaccines.

So here’s the short of it: At least a subset of autism — perhaps
one-third, and very likely more — looks like a type of inflammatory
disease. And it begins in the womb.

It starts with what scientists call immune dysregulation. Ideally,
your immune system should operate like an enlightened action hero,
meting out inflammation precisely, accurately and with deadly force
when necessary, but then quickly returning to a Zen-like calm. Doing
so requires an optimal balance of pro- and anti-inflammatory muscle.

In autistic individuals, the immune system fails at this balancing
act. Inflammatory signals dominate. Anti-inflammatory ones are
inadequate. A state of chronic activation prevails. And the more
skewed toward inflammation, the more acute the autistic symptoms.

Nowhere are the consequences of this dysregulation more evident than
in the autistic brain. Spidery cells that help maintain neurons —
called astroglia and microglia — are enlarged from chronic activation.
Pro-inflammatory signaling molecules abound. Genes involved in
inflammation are switched on.

These findings are important for many reasons, but perhaps the most
noteworthy is that they provide evidence of an abnormal, continuing
biological process. That means that there is finally a therapeutic
target for a disorder defined by behavioral criteria like social
impairments, difficulty communicating and repetitive behaviors.

But how to address it, and where to begin? That question has led
scientists to the womb. A population-wide study from Denmark spanning
two decades of births indicates that infection during pregnancy
increases the risk of autism in the child. Hospitalization for a viral
infection, like the flu, during the first trimester of pregnancy
triples the odds. Bacterial infection, including of the urinary tract,
during the second trimester increases chances by 40 percent.

The lesson here isn’t necessarily that viruses and bacteria directly
damage the fetus. Rather, the mother’s attempt to repel invaders — her
inflammatory response — seems at fault. Research by Paul Patterson, an
expert in neuroimmunity at Caltech, demonstrates this important
principle. Inflaming pregnant mice artificially — without a living
infective agent — prompts behavioral problems in the young. In this
model, autism results from collateral damage. It’s an unintended
consequence of self-defense during pregnancy.

Yet to blame infections for the autism epidemic is folly. First, in
the broadest sense, the epidemiology doesn’t jibe. Leo Kanner first
described infantile autism in 1943. Diagnoses have increased tenfold,
although a careful assessment suggests that the true increase in
incidences is less than half that. But in that same period, viral and
bacterial infections have generally declined. By many measures, we’re
more infection-free than ever before in human history.

Better clues to the causes of the autism phenomenon come from parallel
“epidemics.” The prevalence of inflammatory diseases in general has
increased significantly in the past 60 years. As a group, they include
asthma, now estimated to affect 1 in 10 children — at least double the
prevalence of 1980 — and autoimmune disorders, which afflict 1 in 20.

Both are linked to autism, especially in the mother. One large Danish
study, which included nearly 700,000 births over a decade, found that
a mother’s rheumatoid arthritis, a degenerative disease of the joints,
elevated a child’s risk of autism by 80 percent. Her celiac disease,
an inflammatory disease prompted by proteins in wheat and other
grains, increased it 350 percent. Genetic studies tell a similar tale.
Gene variants associated with autoimmune disease — genes of the immune
system — also increase the risk of autism, especially when they occur
in the mother.

In some cases, scientists even see a misguided immune response in
action. Mothers of autistic children often have unique antibodies that
bind to fetal brain proteins. A few years back, scientists at the MIND
Institute, a research center for neurodevelopmental disorders at the
University of California, Davis, injected these antibodies into
pregnant macaques. (Control animals got antibodies from mothers of
typical children.) Animals whose mothers received “autistic”
antibodies displayed repetitive behavior. They had trouble socializing
with others in the troop. In this model, autism results from an attack
on the developing fetus.

But there are still other paths to the disorder. A mother’s diagnosis
of asthma or allergies during the second trimester of pregnancy
increases her child’s risk of autism.

So does metabolic syndrome, a disorder associated with insulin
resistance, obesity and, crucially, low-grade inflammation. The theme
here is maternal immune dysregulation. Earlier this year, scientists
presented direct evidence of this prenatal imbalance. Amniotic fluid
collected from Danish newborns who later developed autism looked
mildly inflamed.

Debate swirls around the reality of the autism phenomenon, and rightly
so. Diagnostic criteria have changed repeatedly, and awareness has
increased. How much — if any — of the “autism epidemic” is real, how
much artifact?

YET when you consider that, as a whole, diseases of immune
dysregulation have increased in the past 60 years — and that these
disorders are linked to autism — the question seems a little moot. The
better question is: Why are we so prone to inflammatory disorders?
What has happened to the modern immune system?

There’s a good evolutionary answer to that query, it turns out.
Scientists have repeatedly observed that people living in environments
that resemble our evolutionary past, full of microbes and parasites,
don’t suffer from inflammatory diseases as frequently as we do.

Generally speaking, autism also follows this pattern. It seems to be
less prevalent in the developing world. Usually, epidemiologists fault
lack of diagnosis for the apparent absence. A dearth of expertise in
the disorder, the argument goes, gives a false impression of scarcity.
Yet at least one Western doctor who specializes in autism has
explicitly noted that, in a Cambodian population rife with parasites
and acute infections, autism was nearly nonexistent.

For autoimmune and allergic diseases linked to autism, meanwhile, the
evidence is compelling. In environments that resemble the world of
yore, the immune system is much less prone to diseases of
dysregulation.

Generally, the scientists working on autism and inflammation aren’t
aware of this — or if they are, they don’t let on. But Kevin Becker, a
geneticist at the National Institutes of Health, has pointed out that
asthma and autism follow similar epidemiological patterns. They’re
both more common in urban areas than rural; firstborns seem to be at
greater risk; they disproportionately afflict young boys.

In the context of allergic disease, the hygiene hypothesis — that we
suffer from microbial deprivation — has long been invoked to explain
these patterns. Dr. Becker argues that it should apply to autism as
well. (Why the male bias? Male fetuses, it turns out, are more
sensitive to Mom’s inflammation than females.)

More recently, William Parker at Duke University has chimed in. He’s
not, by training, an autism expert. But his work focuses on the immune
system and its role in biology and disease, so he’s particularly
qualified to point out the following: the immune system we consider
normal is actually an evolutionary aberration.

Some years back, he began comparing wild sewer rats with clean lab
rats. They were, in his words, “completely different organisms.” Wild
rats tightly controlled inflammation. Not so the lab rats. Why? The
wild rodents were rife with parasites. Parasites are famous for
limiting inflammation.

Humans also evolved with plenty of parasites. Dr. Parker and many
others think that we’re biologically dependent on the immune
suppression provided by these hangers-on and that their removal has
left us prone to inflammation. “We were willing to put up with hay
fever, even some autoimmune disease,” he told me recently. “But
autism? That’s it! You’ve got to stop this insanity.”

What does stopping the insanity entail? Fix the maternal
dysregulation, and you’ve most likely prevented autism. That’s the
lesson from rodent experiments. In one, Swiss scientists created a
lineage of mice with a genetically reinforced anti-inflammatory
signal. Then the scientists inflamed the pregnant mice. The babies
emerged fine — no behavioral problems. The take-away: Control
inflammation during pregnancy, and it won’t interfere with fetal brain
development.

For people, a drug that’s safe for use during pregnancy may help. A
probiotic, many of which have anti-inflammatory properties, may also
be of benefit. Not coincidentally, asthma researchers are arriving at
similar conclusions; prevention of the lung disease will begin with
the pregnant woman. Dr. Parker has more radical ideas: pre-emptive
restoration of “domesticated” parasites in everybody — worms developed
solely for the purpose of correcting the wayward, postmodern immune
system.

Practically speaking, this seems beyond improbable. And yet, a trial
is under way at the Montefiore Medical Center and the Albert Einstein
College of Medicine testing a medicalized parasite called Trichuris
suis in autistic adults.

First used medically to treat inflammatory bowel disease, the
whipworm, which is native to pigs, has anecdotally shown benefit in
autistic children.

And really, if you spend enough time wading through the science, Dr.
Parker’s idea — an ecosystem restoration project, essentially — not
only fails to seem outrageous, but also seems inevitable.

Since time immemorial, a very specific community of organisms —
microbes, parasites, some viruses — has aggregated to form the human
superorganism. Mounds of evidence suggest that our immune system
anticipates these inputs and that, when they go missing, the organism
comes unhinged.

Future doctors will need to correct the postmodern tendency toward
immune dysregulation. Evolution has provided us with a road map: the
original accretion pattern of the superorganism. Preventive medicine
will need, by strange necessity, to emulate the patterns from deep in
our past.
---
Moises Velasquez-Manoff is the author of “An Epidemic of Absence: A
New Way of Understanding Allergies and Autoimmune Diseases.”
-- 
Jim Devine / "Patriotism is the conviction that your country is
superior to all others because you were born in it." -- George Bernard
Shaw
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