Unbound MEDLINE

Psychoactive pharmaceuticals induce fish gene expression profiles associated with human idiopathic autism.

Abstract

Idiopathic autism, caused by genetic susceptibility interacting with unknown environmental triggers, has increased dramatically in the past 25 years. Identifying environmental triggers has been difficult due to poorly understood pathophysiology and subjective definitions of autism. The use of antidepressants by pregnant women has been associated with autism. These and other unmetabolized psychoactive pharmaceuticals (UPPs) have also been found in drinking water from surface sources, providing another possible exposure route and raising questions about human health consequences. Here, we examined gene expression patterns of fathead minnows treated with a mixture of three psychoactive pharmaceuticals (fluoxetine, venlafaxine & carbamazepine) in dosages intended to be similar to the highest observed conservative estimates of environmental concentrations. We conducted microarray experiments examining brain tissue of fish exposed to individual pharmaceuticals and a mixture of all three. We used gene-class analysis to test for enrichment of gene sets involved with ten human neurological disorders. Only sets associated with idiopathic autism were unambiguously enriched. We found that UPPs induce autism-like gene expression patterns in fish. Our findings suggest a new potential trigger for idiopathic autism in genetically susceptible individuals involving an overlooked source of environmental contamination.

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  • Authors

    Thomas MA, Klaper RD

    Institution

    Department of Biological Sciences, Idaho State University School, Pocatello, Idaho, United States of America. mthomas@isu.edu

    Source

    PloS one 7:6 2012 pg e32917

    MeSH

    Animals
    Autistic Disorder
    Carbamazepine
    Cell Adhesion Molecules
    Cyclohexanols
    Cyprinidae
    Fluoxetine
    Gene Expression Profiling
    Gene Expression Regulation
    Humans
    Microarray Analysis
    Nerve Tissue Proteins
    Psychotropic Drugs
    Receptors, Immunologic
    Water Pollutants, Chemical

    Pub Type(s)

    Comparative Study
    Journal Article
    Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    22701549