Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1057, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Center of Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Division of Neuropsychiatry, Department of Women's and Children's Health, Karolinska Institutet, Floor 8, Gävlegatan 22, SE-11330 Stockholm, Sweden.
Sci Adv. 2018 May 30;4(5):eaat1293. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aat1293. eCollection 2018 May.
Metals are critical to neurodevelopment, and dysregulation in early life has been documented in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, underlying mechanisms and biochemical assays to distinguish ASD cases from controls remain elusive. In a nationwide study of twins in Sweden, we tested whether zinc-copper cycles, which regulate metal metabolism, are disrupted in ASD. Using novel tooth-matrix biomarkers that provide direct measures of fetal elemental uptake, we developed a predictive model to distinguish participants who would be diagnosed with ASD in childhood from those who did not develop the disorder. We replicated our findings in three independent studies in the United States and the UK. We show that three quantifiable characteristics of fetal and postnatal zinc-copper rhythmicity are altered in ASD: the average duration of zinc-copper cycles, regularity with which the cycles recur, and the number of complex features within a cycle. In all independent study sets and in the pooled analysis, zinc-copper rhythmicity was disrupted in ASD cases. In contrast to controls, in ASD cases, the cycle duration was shorter ( = 52.25, < 0.001), regularity was reduced ( = 47.99, < 0.001), and complexity diminished ( = 57.30, < 0.001). With two distinct classification models that used metal rhythmicity data, we achieved 90% accuracy in classifying cases and controls, with sensitivity to ASD diagnosis ranging from 85 to 100% and specificity ranging from 90 to 100%. These findings suggest that altered zinc-copper rhythmicity precedes the emergence of ASD, and quantitative biochemical measures of metal rhythmicity distinguish ASD cases from controls.
金属对神经发育至关重要,自闭症谱系障碍 (ASD) 中已有生命早期失调的记录。然而,用于区分 ASD 病例和对照的潜在机制和生化检测仍然难以捉摸。在瑞典对双胞胎的全国性研究中,我们测试了锌铜循环是否在 ASD 中失调,锌铜循环调节金属代谢。我们使用新的牙基质生物标志物来直接测量胎儿元素摄取量,开发了一种预测模型来区分那些在儿童时期被诊断为 ASD 的参与者和那些没有发展出该疾病的参与者。我们在美国和英国的三项独立研究中复制了我们的发现。我们表明,ASD 中胎儿和产后锌铜节律的三个可量化特征发生了改变:锌铜循环的平均持续时间、循环重复的规律性以及循环内的复杂特征数量。在所有独立的研究组和汇总分析中,ASD 病例中的锌铜节律都被打乱了。与对照组相比,在 ASD 病例中,循环持续时间更短(=52.25,<0.001),规律性降低(=47.99,<0.001),复杂性减弱(=57.30,<0.001)。使用两个不同的分类模型,我们使用金属节律数据实现了 90%的病例和对照分类准确性,对 ASD 诊断的敏感性范围为 85%至 100%,特异性范围为 90%至 100%。这些发现表明,改变的锌铜节律先于 ASD 的出现,金属节律的定量生化测量可以区分 ASD 病例和对照。