Dietert Rodney R, Dietert Janice M
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY14852, USA.
J Toxicol Environ Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Oct;11(8):660-80. doi: 10.1080/10937400802370923.
Early-life immune insults (ELII) including xenobiotic-induced developmental immunotoxicity (DIT) are important factors in childhood and adult chronic diseases. However, prenatal and perinatal environmentally induced immune alterations have yet to be considered in depth in the context of autism and autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). Numerous factors produce early-life-induced immune dysfunction in offspring, including exposure to xenobiotics, maternal infections, and other prenatal-neonatal stressors. Early life sensitivity to ELII, including DIT, results from the heightened vulnerability of the developing immune system to disruption and the serious nature of the adverse outcomes arising after disruption of one-time immune maturational events. The resulting health risks extend beyond infectious diseases, cancer, allergy, and autoimmunity to include pathologies of the neurological, reproductive, and endocrine systems. Because these changes may include misregulation of resident inflammatory myelomonocytic cells in tissues such as the brain, they are a potential concern in cases of prenatal-neonatal brain pathologies and neurobehavioral deficits. Autism and ASDs are chronic developmental neurobehavioral disorders that are on the rise in the United States with prenatal and perinatal environmental factors suspected as contributors to this increase. Evidence for an association between environmentally associated childhood immune dysfunction and ASDs suggests that ELII and DIT may contribute to these conditions. However, it is not known if this linkage is directly associated with the brain pathologies or represents a separate (or secondary) outcome. This review considers the known features of ELII and DIT and how they may provide important clues to prenatal brain inflammation and the risk of autism and ASDs.
包括外源性物质诱导的发育性免疫毒性(DIT)在内的早期生活免疫损伤(ELII)是儿童期和成人慢性疾病的重要因素。然而,在自闭症和自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的背景下,产前和围产期环境诱导的免疫改变尚未得到深入研究。许多因素会导致后代出现早期生活诱导的免疫功能障碍,包括接触外源性物质、母体感染和其他产前 - 新生儿应激源。早期生活对ELII(包括DIT)的敏感性源于发育中的免疫系统对破坏的高度脆弱性以及一次性免疫成熟事件被破坏后产生的不良后果的严重性。由此产生的健康风险不仅包括传染病、癌症、过敏和自身免疫性疾病,还包括神经、生殖和内分泌系统的病理状况。由于这些变化可能包括大脑等组织中常驻炎性骨髓单核细胞的调节异常,因此在产前 - 新生儿脑部病变和神经行为缺陷的情况下,它们是一个潜在的问题。自闭症和ASD是慢性发育性神经行为障碍,在美国呈上升趋势,产前和围产期环境因素被怀疑是导致这种增加的原因。环境相关的儿童免疫功能障碍与ASD之间存在关联的证据表明,ELII和DIT可能导致这些疾病。然而,尚不清楚这种联系是否与脑部病变直接相关,还是代表一个独立的(或次要的)结果。本综述考虑了ELII和DIT的已知特征,以及它们如何为产前脑部炎症以及自闭症和ASD的风险提供重要线索。