Rare form of autism could be treated with common nutritional supplement

Posted: Published on September 7th, 2012

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Researchers may have discovered a potential treatment for a rare form of autism marked by epileptic seizures a simple nutritional supplement.

In a recent international study, a team of scientists from the University of California, San Diego and Yale University schools of medicine have identified a genetic mutation in certain patients suffering from this unique type of autism. After performing what is known as exome sequencing a type of selective genome sequencing the team found that these patients speed up the metabolism of specific amino acids called branched chain amino acids, or BCAAs.

According to Autism Speaks, approximately one-third of those suffering from autism also suffer from epilepsy, a neurological disorder marked by periods of seizure or convulsion. The discovery could lead to better understanding of the mechanisms behind autism and epilepsy, as well as lead to ways to treat the condition sooner.

After recognizing this deficiency in BCAAs, the researchers thought that a large supplement of amino acids would help to compensate for their faster metabolisms.

These are amino acids we cant produce in our bodies, Gaia Novarino, a staff scientist in the UCSD Department of Neurosciences and the studys first author, told FoxNews.com. So we have to take them in our dietUsually we are able to maintain constant normal levels of those amino acids. However, they would eat the same things that we do, and they have much lower levels of those amino acid.

According to Novarino, people have developed a way to turn off the metabolic breakdown of these amino acids during times of starvation; however, the patients the researchers studied could not do this.

Novarino, along with senior author Dr. Joseph Gleeson, a professor in the UCSD Department of Neurosciences, examined two closely related families who had children with autism and history of seizures. Through exome sequencing, they analyzed the specific coding in the genome involved in the making of proteins leading them to the mutated gene that typically regulates BCAAs.

To test their supplement theory, the team gave large doses of amino acids to mice that had been genetically engineered with the same genetic mutation found in those with autism and epilepsy. They were surprised to find that the supplement had very positive results all around.

We are able to elevate the levels of the amino acids in the blood to normal levels, Novarino said. This breakdown was so fast that we thought we would never reach a normal range so that [result] was very positive. We not only got a good range, but went a little above the normal range.

Not only were they able to maintain good amino acid levels in the mice, but the scientists found the neurobehavioral symptoms were reversed at these levels. While they only tested the supplement in an animal model, theyre hoping this regimen could do the same for humans.

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Rare form of autism could be treated with common nutritional supplement

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