Siemann Justin K, Veenstra-VanderWeele Jeremy, Wallace Mark T
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, Center for Autism and the Developing Brain, New York Presbyterian Hospital, and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York, USA.
Autism Res. 2020 Sep;13(9):1430-1449. doi: 10.1002/aur.2375. Epub 2020 Sep 1.
Abnormal sensory responses are a DSM-5 symptom of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and research findings demonstrate altered sensory processing in ASD. Beyond difficulties with processing information within single sensory domains, including both hypersensitivity and hyposensitivity, difficulties in multisensory processing are becoming a core issue of focus in ASD. These difficulties may be targeted by treatment approaches such as "sensory integration," which is frequently applied in autism treatment but not yet based on clear evidence. Recently, psychophysical data have emerged to demonstrate multisensory deficits in some children with ASD. Unlike deficits in social communication, which are best understood in humans, sensory and multisensory changes offer a tractable marker of circuit dysfunction that is more easily translated into animal model systems to probe the underlying neurobiological mechanisms. Paralleling experimental paradigms that were previously applied in humans and larger mammals, we and others have demonstrated that multisensory function can also be examined behaviorally in rodents. Here, we review the sensory and multisensory difficulties commonly found in ASD, examining laboratory findings that relate these findings across species. Next, we discuss the known neurobiology of multisensory integration, drawing largely on experimental work in larger mammals, and extensions of these paradigms into rodents. Finally, we describe emerging investigations into multisensory processing in genetic mouse models related to autism risk. By detailing findings from humans to mice, we highlight the advantage of multisensory paradigms that can be easily translated across species, as well as the potential for rodent experimental systems to reveal opportunities for novel treatments. LAY SUMMARY: Sensory and multisensory deficits are commonly found in ASD and may result in cascading effects that impact social communication. By using similar experiments to those in humans, we discuss how studies in animal models may allow an understanding of the brain mechanisms that underlie difficulties in multisensory integration, with the ultimate goal of developing new treatments. Autism Res 2020, 13: 1430-1449. © 2020 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
异常的感觉反应是《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM - 5)中自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的一个症状,研究结果表明ASD患者存在感觉处理改变的情况。除了在单一感觉领域内处理信息存在困难,包括过敏和低敏反应外,多感觉处理困难正成为ASD研究的一个核心焦点问题。这些困难可能通过“感觉统合”等治疗方法来解决,“感觉统合”在自闭症治疗中经常使用,但尚未基于明确的证据。最近,心理物理学数据表明一些ASD儿童存在多感觉缺陷。与在人类中最易理解的社交沟通缺陷不同,感觉和多感觉变化提供了一个易于处理的电路功能障碍标记,更容易转化为动物模型系统来探究潜在的神经生物学机制。与之前应用于人类和大型哺乳动物的实验范式类似,我们和其他人已经证明多感觉功能也可以在啮齿动物身上进行行为学检测。在此,我们回顾了ASD中常见的感觉和多感觉困难,研究了跨物种关联这些发现的实验室结果。接下来,我们讨论已知的多感觉整合神经生物学,主要借鉴大型哺乳动物的实验工作,以及这些范式在啮齿动物中的扩展。最后,我们描述了对与自闭症风险相关的基因小鼠模型中多感觉处理的新研究。通过详细阐述从人类到小鼠的研究结果,我们强调了多感觉范式易于跨物种转化的优势,以及啮齿动物实验系统揭示新治疗机会的潜力。内容摘要:感觉和多感觉缺陷在ASD中很常见,可能会导致连锁效应,影响社交沟通。通过使用与人类相似的实验,我们讨论了动物模型研究如何有助于理解多感觉整合困难背后的脑机制,最终目标是开发新的治疗方法。《自闭症研究》2020年,13卷:1430 - 1449页。© 2020国际自闭症研究协会,威利期刊公司