Every 18 minutes in the U.S., a baby who will acquire autism is born.
Despite its widespread prevalence, scientists do not know what causes
the developmental disorder –an array of genetic and environmental
factors are probably involved. One such variable, a new study suggest,
might be the womb: mothers of autistic children may produce immune
proteins that react with and potentially harm their babies' brains
during pregnancy.



Past studies have linked autism to the immune system-especially to
autoimmune reactions, in which the body's defenses mistakenly attack
native tissue. Autistic people are more likely than healthy subjects to
make antibodies against their own brain cells, and autoimmune disorders
such as type 1 diabetes are more common in mothers of autistic kids.
Harvey Singer
<http://www.hopkinsneuro.org/peds/doc.cfm/expert/Harvey_Singer%20> , a
pediatric neurologist at Johns Hopkins University <http://www.jhu.edu> ,
wondered whether mothers of autistics might have passed aberrant
antibodies to their children during pregnancy.



Singer and his colleagues collected blood samples from 100 mothers of
children with moderate to severe autism and 100 mothers of healthy
children. They extracted only the antibodies that could cross the
placenta during pregnancy, then tested these antibodies against proteins
from human fetal brain tissue. The team found that the blood from the
mothers of autistic children reacted more strongly than that of the
mothers normal children against at least to fetal brain proteins. The
two groups of mothers had reactions similar to each other against the
other proteins.



"These" immune factors may help turn on or trigger some
potential underlying problem, "Singer speculates. He does not yet
know, however the role the brain proteins play during development or
whether the maternal antibodies actually influence their function. The
team plans to investigate these questions by injecting human maternal
antibodies into pregnant mice to see if their offspring show
developmental problems.

Happy Learning,



Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>



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