Rare human gene variant in ADHD, and autism exposes fundamental sex differences

Study Uncovers Surprising Difference in Male and Female  Dopamine Synapses Supporting Attention, Movement, Motivation and Pleasure


Randy Blakely, Ph.D., professor of biomedical science in FAU’s Schmidt College of Medicine and executive director of the FAU Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute. CREDIT Florida Atlantic University

The prevalence, age of onset, and clinical symptoms for virtually all neuropsychiatric disorders differ between men and women. Among the disorders with pronounced sex bias are Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), where the ratio of males/females diagnosed is approximately 4 to 1. Whether this skewed ratio arises from roles played in brain development by sex-specific DNA sequences or hormones or reflects the way that biological mechanisms and environmental influences elicit behavioral patterns differently in males and females, remains an area of open investigation.

Regardless of origin, altered behavior in these disorders signals a change in the function of key brain circuits wired up during development, refined throughout life, and coordinated through the actions of brain chemicals called neurotransmitters. One vital neurotransmitter that plays a key role in the behaviors altered by both ADHD and ASD is dopamine, whose powerful actions support motor initiation and coordination, motivation, reward and social behavior, as well as attention and higher cognitive function. Although dopamine-sensitive brain circuits engaged in these processes have been under scrutiny for decades, and in the case of ADHD, are the target of medications such as Adderall® and Ritalin®, the intrinsic sex-dependent differences in these pathways that could guide more precise diagnoses and treatments have only recently begun to be elucidated.

To better understand how dopamine levels at brain synapses are managed, neuroscientists from Florida Atlantic University, along with collaborators at the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, have now added a significant piece to this puzzle by establishing key differences in the molecular dopamine disposal machinery in the brains of male and female mice.

The new research published in the journal Molecular Psychiatryand led by Randy Blakely, Ph.D., professor of biomedical science in FAU’s Schmidt College of Medicine and executive director of the FAU Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute, provides new insight into how sex determines the mechanisms by which distinct synapses monitor and regulate dopamine signaling. Moreover, the impact the sex differences described is particularly pronounced when the mice express a human genetic variant found in boys with either ADHD or ASD.  

“Often, due to assumptions that sex hormone variation will cloud data interpretations, and that use of one sex will cut animal use and costs in half without a loss of key insights, many researchers using animal models to study brain disorders work chiefly with males, even more reasonable when modeling disorders that exhibit male bias,” said Blakely.  

In a prior study, looking for genetic changes in dopamine regulatory genes in children with ADHD, Blakely and his team identified a gene variant that alters the function of the dopamine transporter (DAT) in a peculiar way. Normally DAT acts to remove dopamine from synapses, acting like a nanoscale dopamine vacuum cleaner. When the DAT variant was expressed in cells, however, it “ran backward,” spitting out dopamine rather than efficiently removing it. After engineering the variant into the genome of mice, Blakely’s team found changes in behavior and drug responses predicted by this anomalous DAT behavior, with an emphasis on traits linked to pathways related to locomotor activation, habitual behavior and impulsivity. Notably, these studies were performed exclusively with male mutant mice.

Blakely and Adele Stewart, Ph.D., first author on the report, a research assistant professor of biomedical science in FAU’s Schmidt College of Medicine and a member of the FAU Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute, recognized there was more to be done, particularly with respect to how females would handle the mutation. Would the DAT mutation impact the same brain regions and behaviors in females as it had done in males? The answer is a resounding no. Females show effects of the mutation in brain regions unaffected in males and vice versa. Further work revealed that this switch is due to a circuit flip in how brain pathways in males and females use a key DAT regulator protein to magnify the backwards activity of the transporter.

The behavioral consequences of this region-specific, sex-biased pattern of DAT regulation are profound, with the mutant DAT altering behaviors in a pattern unique to each sex. For example, mutant females appeared more anxious and had issues with novelty recognition compared to wildtype females. Males on the other hand are less social and display increased perseverative behavior, changes not seen in females.

“Our work clearly shows that the female mutant DAT mice are not ‘protected’ from the impact of the mutation, but rather, exhibit a unique set of behavioral changes linked to an ingrained, sex-biased architecture of the dopamine system,” said Stewart. “The same variant also has been found in two unrelated boys with ASD, a disorder that often also displays comorbid ADHD.”

Interestingly, the only reported clinical occurrence of the DAT variant in a female involved a diagnosis of bipolar disorder (BPD). Both the mania and depression associated with BPD have been suggested to be linked to altered dopamine signaling. Blakely’s group also has reported high impulsivity traits in a female carrier of the same mutation studied in this latest paper, suggesting that overlap of traits linked to dopamine can also occur between the sexes, or perhaps the forms of impulsivity (e.g. waiting versus action) may be involved.

A “resilience” framework often is used to explain discrepancies in the sex bias observed in neuropsychiatric disorders. However, recent evidence suggests that sex bias can be due, at least in part, to differences in symptomology and associated comorbidities and the resultant failure of current diagnostic instruments to assure identification of the same disorder in both sexes.

“While we understand that there are biological differences between rodent and human brains, studies like ours provide an important opportunity to explore biological mechanisms that contribute to sex differences in risk for neuropsychiatric diseases,” said Stewart. “What our study shows is that behavioral generalizations across the sexes may limit diagnosis of mental illness, particularly if one sex translates alterations into outward signs such as  hyperactivity and aggression versus more internal manifestations such as learning, memory and mood, even when the same molecular pathology is at work. What is more, our work supports the idea that treatment strategies should be cognizant of the sex-dependence of neuronal signaling mechanisms rather than assuming treatment that what is good for the goose is good for the gander. In fact, such therapies may either not be good for the gander at all, or good for a completely different kind of disorder.”

The research provides a clear example of how genetic changes can have sex-dependent effects on physiology and behavior, depending on whether other co-regulatory genes are naturally expressed by the same cells.

“Because the basis for the differential response to the DAT mutation is the presence or absence of DAT regulation in these two areas, the implications do not just apply to the few individuals with the genetic variant nor are limited to ADHD and ASD,” said Blakely. “Investigators exploring other disorders linked to altered dopamine signaling should consider whether the mechanism we have uncovered could drive sex-dependent features of these diseases. By extension, we now need to consider whether the mechanism we have uncovered contributes to sex-dependent ways in which dopamine signaling drives normal behavior.”   

The prose of Dr. Seuss shines a light on how the brain processes speech

Read-Aloud "Green Eggs and Ham" by Dr Seuss - A Book for Kids - YouTube

Researchers at the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience at the University of Rochester have expanded the understanding of how the brain is engaged during complex audiovisual speech perception. The study now out in NeuroImage, describes how listening and watching a narrator tell a story activates an extensive network of brain regions involved in sensory processing, multisensory integration, and cognitive functions associated with the comprehension of the story content. Understanding the involvement of this larger network has the potential to give researchers new ways to investigate neurodevelopmental disorders.

“Multisensory integration is an important function of our nervous system as it can substantially enhance our ability to detect and identify objects in our environment,” said Lars Ross, Ph.D., research assistant professor of Imaging Sciences and Neuroscience and first author of the study. “A failure of this function may lead to a sensory environment that is perceived as overwhelming and can cause a person to have difficulty adapting to their surroundings, a problem we believe underlies symptoms of some neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism.”

Using fMRI, researchers examined the brain activity of 53 participants as they watched a video recording of a speaker reading “The Lorax.” How the story was presented would change randomly in one of four ways – audio only, visual only, synchronized audiovisual, or unsynchronized audiovisual. Researchers also monitored the participants’ eye movements. They found that along with the previously identified sites of multisensory integration, viewing the speaker’s facial movements also enhanced brain activity in the broader semantic network and extralinguistic regions not usually associated with multisensory integration, such as the amygdala and primary visual cortex. Researchers also found activity in thalamic brain regions which are known to be very early stages at which sensory information from our eyes and ears interact.

“This suggests many regions beyond multisensory integration play a role in how the brain processes complex multisensory speech – including those associated with extralinguistic perceptual and cognitive processing,” said Ross.

Researchers designed this experiment with children in mind, according to the investigators who have already begun working with both children and adults on the autism spectrum in an effort to gain insight into how their ability to process audiovisual speech develops over time.

“Our lab is profoundly interested in this network because it goes awry in a number of neurodevelopmental disorders,” said John Foxe, Ph.D., lead author of this study. “Now that we have designed this detailed map of the multisensory speech integration network, we can ask much more pointed questions about multisensory speech in neurodevelopmental disorders, like autism and dyslexia, and get at the specific brain circuits that might be impacted.”

Fish to help in the search for MS drugs

Illustration


Zebrafish and humans both have a GPR17 receptor. In the study, the fish receptor was replaced by its human counterpart. This makes it more likely to find pharmacologically active substances. CREDIT © AG Kostenis-Gomeza / University of Bonn

The zebrafish should be known to many aquarium enthusiasts mainly because of its striking pigmentation. However, the characteristic black-blue stripes, to which the animal owes its name, only form over time. Its eyelash-sized larvae, on the other hand, are still more or less transparent. Many developmental processes in their bodies can therefore be observed under the light microscope. For this reason, they now serve as a model organism for research groups around the globe.

“At the University of Bonn, for example, we are investigating how zebrafish repair defective nerve tissue,” explains Prof. Dr. Benjamin Odermatt from the Institute of Anatomy at the University Hospital Bonn. “We are also interested in this because many genes involved in this process also exist in a similar form in humans.” In principle, agents that boost these repair genes in fish could thus also work in humans. However, the differences between the genetic makeup of fish and humans are often significant. The larvae are therefore sometimes of limited use in the search for new drugs.

Fish gene replaced by human gene

“We therefore took a different approach,” explains Prof. Dr. Evi Kostenis from the Institute of Pharmaceutical Biology at the University of Bonn. ” For a human gene known to play a role in the repair of nerve cells we looked for its counterpart in zebrafish. Then we excised this counterpart in the fish and replaced it with the human version.” The new genetic material took over the function of the original zebrafish gene. “If we now find a substance that boosts the repair processes in the fish with the human gene, there is a good chance that this will also be the case in humans,” says the scientist, who is also a member of the Transdisciplinary Research Area “Life and Health” at the University of Bonn.

The researchers demonstrated that this replacement works in their pilot study on the so-called GPR17 receptor. In humans, its overactivation can lead to diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS). Nerve cells communicate by means of electrical signals. Their extensions are surrounded by a kind of insulating layer, a lipid-like substance called myelin. It prevents short circuits and also significantly speeds up the transmission of stimuli. This protective sheath is produced by specialized cells named oligodendrocytes. These resemble a microscopic octopus: many long arms extend from their cell body, most of which consist of myelin. Like an insulating tape, these wrap themselves around the nerve cell processes during brain development. Normally, the protective layer lasts a lifetime.

Insulating tape dispenser remain in immature state

In multiple sclerosis, however, the body’s own immune system destroys the myelin layer. This results in neurological disorders, for example in speech, vision or walking. But normally there is a supply of immature oligodendrocytes in the brain for repair work. When damage occurs, they mature and patch up the hole. In multiple sclerosis, this mechanism is disrupted – many of the cellular insulating tape donor cells remain in their immature state. The GPR17 receptor seems to bear the main blame for this: if it is activated by a molecular signal, it slows down the maturation of the oligodendrocytes.

“Zebrafish also have a GPR17 receptor,” explains Dr. Jesus Gomeza, who led the study with Kostenis and Odermatt. “And there it also regulates how many oligodendrocytes mature.” The researchers now replaced part of the receptor gene with its human counterpart – namely, the very structure responsible for receiving molecular signals. “We were able to show that this new mosaic gene functions normally in the fish larvae,” says Gomeza. A molecule that inhibits the human GPR17 receptor in the test tube also cranked up the formation of mature oligodendrocytes in the modified fish.

In the search for new active ingredients, substances are first tested in cell cultures. Only individual, very promising candidates are then tested in mice or other animal models. But even if they work there, tests in humans still often end soberingly. “Humanized zebrafish larvae allow many substances to be screened quickly, and with a high chance of success, since the target genes originate from humans,” explains Benjamin Odermatt. “From our point of view, this is a very promising avenue for drug development.”

How will the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade affect rheumatology?

An article in Arthritis & Rheumatology describes how the Supreme Court’s June 24th decision to overturn Roe v. Wade portends grave consequences for the practice of rheumatology.

Abortion bans that have been drafted by more than half of US states can now be implemented, and many more are in development. For patients with rheumatic diseases, family planning choices will be limited, thereby restricting their options for medical treatment. Providers will be forced to weigh delivering evidence-based clinical recommendations against the personal, professional, and legal risks of violating constraints on reproductive rights.

The authors stress that pregnancy can be dangerous for some individuals with rheumatic diseases, and many of the medications that benefit patients with conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus have been linked to birth defects. 

“Many patients with rheumatic diseases are reproductive aged women whose complicated diseases are exacerbated by pregnancy, especially when unplanned. This burden of illness is more pronounced in racial and ethnic minority women, who face both greater morbidity and mortality due to their illness and often live in states with the most restrictive abortion legislation,” said lead author Bonnie L. Bermas, MD, of UTSouthwestern Medical Center. “Thus, the recent Supreme Court Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s health organization decision not only negatively impacts our ability to provide the best healthcare for all of our patients, but also furthers the existing structural racism that impedes the delivery of appropriate reproductive and rheumatic disease care for our minoritized patients.”

Type 2 diabetes takes greatest toll on life expectancy of women, younger people and smokers, analysis of UK data finds

Type 2 diabetes takes greatest toll on life expectancy of women, younger people and smokers, analysis of UK data finds
Type 2 diabetes takes greatest toll on life expectancy of women, younger people and smokers, analysis of UK data finds

New research being presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes in Stockholm, Sweden (19-23 Sept) indicates that type 2 diabetes (T2D) takes a greater toll on the mortality and life expectancy of women, younger people and smokers.

A woman with T2D has 60% increased chance of an early death and will live five years less than the average woman in the general population. Men with T2D, meanwhile, have a 44% increased risk of dying prematurely and live 4.5 years less, the modelling by Mike Stedman, of Res Consortium, a healthcare consultancy in Andover, UK, Dr Adrian Heald, of Salford Royal Hospital, Salford, UK and colleagues, indicates.

Smoking shortens the life expectancy of people with T2D by ten years, while diagnosis at an earlier age (before the age of 65) reduces life expectancy by over eight years.

3.5 million people in the UK have been diagnosed with T2D, the most common form of the condition with numbers expected to rise in future years. It usually occurs in middle-aged and older people but onset at a younger age is becoming more common globally.

People in England with diabetes are known to have a 50 to 70% higher risk of dying prematurely than individuals without diabetes (this is known as the age-standardised mortality ratio or SMR).

Little is known, however, about how demographic and lifestyle factors might affect the size of this risk.

The researchers worked out the life expectancy of T2D patients in Salford, UK (11,806 participants, 55% male, average age 66.2 years) over a ten-year period and compared this to life expectancy figures for the general population of the same age and sex.

They then looked at the effect of demographic and lifestyle factors on mortality rate and life expectancy of the individuals with T2D.

The data used included the participants’ health records from 2010 to 2020 (stopping before the COVID-19 pandemic), Office for National Statistics information on life expectancy of the general population andinformation from the Index of Multiple Deprivation.

3,921 of the participants died (2,080 men) during the ten years studied, compared to an expected 2,135, giving a standardised mortality ratio (SMR) of 1.84, meaning that the risk of an early death was 84% higher in people with diabetes than in the general population. 

The increased risk of early death was greater for women with T2D than for men with T2D (96% vs. 74% greater risk of early death).

This surprised the researchers because T2D is generally assumed to have a greater effect on men’s health than on women’s.

When the results were adjusted to take into account levels of deprivation (Salford is one of the most disadvantaged areas of England), those with T2D still had a significantly higher risk of an early death.

With adjustment for deprivation, a woman with T2D was 60% more likely to die early than someone in the general population, while a man with T2D was 44% more likely to die prematurely.

The results also suggest that T2D has a greater effect on the life expectancy of people diagnosed at a younger age. Those diagnosed below 65 years old had a 93% higher risk of an early death and lived more than eight years less than people of the same age in the general population.Those diagnosed at 65 and older lost less than 2 years.

Smoking had the largest effect on the mortality and life expectancy of people with T2D. The modelling found that people with T2D who smoked were 2.5 times more likely to die prematurely than people in the general population.

Smokers with T2D lived ten years less than people in the general population; non-smokers and ex-smokers with T2D lost three years of life expectancy.

The modelling found that a female smoker who was diagnosed before the age of 65 was 3.75 times more likely to die prematurely and lived 15 years less than a woman in the general population of the same age.

Dr Heald says: “Our modelling suggests that type 2 diabetes has a greater effect on the life expectancy of women, smokers and those diagnosed at a younger age.

“A woman with type 2 diabetes for example, might live five years less than the average woman in the general population, while someone diagnosed at a younger age might lose eight years of life expectancy.

“It is vital that the groups at the highest risk are made aware of not just the increased risk that they face but also the size of the risk.  Doing so may make the health advice they are given seem more relevant and so help them make changes that can improve their quality – and length – of life.”