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Primary olfactory cortex in autism and epilepsy: increased glial cells in autism

Primary olfactory cortex in autism and epilepsy: increased glial cells in autism
Primary olfactory cortex in autism and epilepsy: increased glial cells in autism

Autism Spectrum Disorder is characterized by sensory anomalies including impaired olfactory identification. Between 5 and 46 percent of individuals with autism have a clinical diagnosis of epilepsy. Primary olfactory cortex (piriform cortex) is central to olfactory identification and is an epileptogenic structure. Cytoarchitectural changes in olfactory cortex may underlie olfactory differences seen in autism. Primary olfactory cortex was sampled from 17 post-mortem autism cases with and without epilepsy, 11 epilepsy cases without autism and 11 typically developed cases. Stereological and neuropathological methods were used to quantify glial, pyramidal and non-pyramidal cell densities in layers of the piriform as well as identify pathological differences in this area and its neighbouring region, the olfactory tubercle. We found increased layer II glial cell densities in autism with and without epilepsy, which were negatively correlated with age and positively correlated with levels of corpora amylacea in layer I. These changes were also associated with greater symptom severity and did not extend to the olfactory tubercle. Glial cell organization may follow an altered trajectory of development with age in autism. The findings are consistent with other studies implicating increased glial cells in the autism brain. Altered cytoarchitecture may contribute to sensory deficits observed in affected individuals. This study provides evidence that autism is linked to alterations in the cytoarchitectural structure that underlies primary sensory processes and is not restricted to heteromodal (“higher”) cognitive centers.

autism spectrum disorder, epilepsy, glia, olfaction, primary olfactory cortex
1015-6305
437-448
Menassa, David A.
eeb394a6-c72b-49d7-a820-95b0256c22d5
Sloan, Carolyn
fbf2856d-1327-4fe3-809a-eff719539dd7
Chance, Steven A.
2d688268-af22-4d09-a532-a1a6f835e54c
Menassa, David A.
eeb394a6-c72b-49d7-a820-95b0256c22d5
Sloan, Carolyn
fbf2856d-1327-4fe3-809a-eff719539dd7
Chance, Steven A.
2d688268-af22-4d09-a532-a1a6f835e54c

Menassa, David A., Sloan, Carolyn and Chance, Steven A. (2017) Primary olfactory cortex in autism and epilepsy: increased glial cells in autism. Brain Pathology, 27 (4), 437-448. (doi:10.1111/bpa.12415).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Autism Spectrum Disorder is characterized by sensory anomalies including impaired olfactory identification. Between 5 and 46 percent of individuals with autism have a clinical diagnosis of epilepsy. Primary olfactory cortex (piriform cortex) is central to olfactory identification and is an epileptogenic structure. Cytoarchitectural changes in olfactory cortex may underlie olfactory differences seen in autism. Primary olfactory cortex was sampled from 17 post-mortem autism cases with and without epilepsy, 11 epilepsy cases without autism and 11 typically developed cases. Stereological and neuropathological methods were used to quantify glial, pyramidal and non-pyramidal cell densities in layers of the piriform as well as identify pathological differences in this area and its neighbouring region, the olfactory tubercle. We found increased layer II glial cell densities in autism with and without epilepsy, which were negatively correlated with age and positively correlated with levels of corpora amylacea in layer I. These changes were also associated with greater symptom severity and did not extend to the olfactory tubercle. Glial cell organization may follow an altered trajectory of development with age in autism. The findings are consistent with other studies implicating increased glial cells in the autism brain. Altered cytoarchitecture may contribute to sensory deficits observed in affected individuals. This study provides evidence that autism is linked to alterations in the cytoarchitectural structure that underlies primary sensory processes and is not restricted to heteromodal (“higher”) cognitive centers.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 15 August 2016
Published date: July 2017
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder, epilepsy, glia, olfaction, primary olfactory cortex

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 417405
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/417405
ISSN: 1015-6305
PURE UUID: ed8d49d7-606c-4505-9c13-ea01902204c1

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Date deposited: 30 Jan 2018 17:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 16:32

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Contributors

Author: David A. Menassa
Author: Carolyn Sloan
Author: Steven A. Chance

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