Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders
An ever-increasing body of literature describes compelling evidence that a subset of young children on the autism spectrum show abnormal cerebral growth trajectories. In these cases, normal cerebral size at birth is followed by a period of abnormal growth and starting in late childhood often by regr...
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doaj-c20bae8d77d945848d7463ed516ce9e92020-11-24T23:27:56ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Chemistry2296-26462016-03-01410.3389/fchem.2016.00012181289Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disordersGaurav eKaushik0Gaurav eKaushik1Konstantinos eZarbalis2Konstantinos eZarbalis3University of California, DavisShriners Hospitals for ChildrenUniversity of California, DavisShriners Hospitals for ChildrenAn ever-increasing body of literature describes compelling evidence that a subset of young children on the autism spectrum show abnormal cerebral growth trajectories. In these cases, normal cerebral size at birth is followed by a period of abnormal growth and starting in late childhood often by regression compared to unaffected controls. Recent work has demonstrated an abnormal increase in the number of neurons of the prefrontal cortex suggesting that cerebral size increase in autism is driven by excess neuronal production. In addition, some affected children display patches of abnormal laminar positioning of cortical projection neurons. As both cortical projection neuron numbers and their correct layering within the developing cortex requires the undisturbed proliferation of neural progenitors, it appears that neural progenitors lie in the center of the autism pathology associated with early brain overgrowth. Consequently, autism spectrum disorders associated with cerebral enlargement should be viewed as birth defects of an early embryonic origin with profound implications for their early diagnosis, preventive strategies, and therapeutic intervention.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fchem.2016.00012/fullCerebral Cortexneuronal migrationAutism Spectrum Disordersneural progenitorsMegalencephaly |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Gaurav eKaushik Gaurav eKaushik Konstantinos eZarbalis Konstantinos eZarbalis |
spellingShingle |
Gaurav eKaushik Gaurav eKaushik Konstantinos eZarbalis Konstantinos eZarbalis Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders Frontiers in Chemistry Cerebral Cortex neuronal migration Autism Spectrum Disorders neural progenitors Megalencephaly |
author_facet |
Gaurav eKaushik Gaurav eKaushik Konstantinos eZarbalis Konstantinos eZarbalis |
author_sort |
Gaurav eKaushik |
title |
Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders |
title_short |
Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders |
title_full |
Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders |
title_fullStr |
Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders |
title_full_unstemmed |
Prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders |
title_sort |
prenatal neurogenesis in autism spectrum disorders |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Chemistry |
issn |
2296-2646 |
publishDate |
2016-03-01 |
description |
An ever-increasing body of literature describes compelling evidence that a subset of young children on the autism spectrum show abnormal cerebral growth trajectories. In these cases, normal cerebral size at birth is followed by a period of abnormal growth and starting in late childhood often by regression compared to unaffected controls. Recent work has demonstrated an abnormal increase in the number of neurons of the prefrontal cortex suggesting that cerebral size increase in autism is driven by excess neuronal production. In addition, some affected children display patches of abnormal laminar positioning of cortical projection neurons. As both cortical projection neuron numbers and their correct layering within the developing cortex requires the undisturbed proliferation of neural progenitors, it appears that neural progenitors lie in the center of the autism pathology associated with early brain overgrowth. Consequently, autism spectrum disorders associated with cerebral enlargement should be viewed as birth defects of an early embryonic origin with profound implications for their early diagnosis, preventive strategies, and therapeutic intervention. |
topic |
Cerebral Cortex neuronal migration Autism Spectrum Disorders neural progenitors Megalencephaly |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fchem.2016.00012/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT gauravekaushik prenatalneurogenesisinautismspectrumdisorders AT gauravekaushik prenatalneurogenesisinautismspectrumdisorders AT konstantinosezarbalis prenatalneurogenesisinautismspectrumdisorders AT konstantinosezarbalis prenatalneurogenesisinautismspectrumdisorders |
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