All the latest press releases published by our press officers.
A selection of the latest research results from Uppsala University.
All articles about people who have received grants and awards.
An important step towards developing a rapid, inexpensive diagnostic method for autism has been take by Uppsala University, among other universities. Through advanced mass spectrometry the researchers managed to capture promising biomarkers from a tiny blood sample. The study has just been published in the prestigious journal Nature Translational Psychiatry.
There are no acknowledged biomarkers for autism today. Researchers at Berzelii Centre and the Science for Life Laboratory
in Uppsala who, in collaboration with colleagues at Linnaeus University in Sweden and the Faculty of Medicine in Tehran, Iran,
who have discovered some promising biomarkers.
Many diseases are caused by protein alterations inside and outside
the body’s cells. By studying protein patterns in tissue and body fluids, these alterations can be mapped to provide important
information about underlying causes of disease. Sometimes protein patterns can also be used as biomarkers to enable diagnosis
or as a prognosticating tool to monitor the development of a disease. In the current study disruptions of the nervous system
were in focus when the scientists studied protein patterns in autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
To identify potential
biomarkers (peptides or proteins), the researchers performed a detailed protein analysis of blood plasma from children with
ASD compared with a control group. Using advanced mass spectrometric methods, they succeeded in identifying peptides consisting
of fragments of a protein whose natural function is in the immune system, the complement factor C3 protein.
The
study is based on blood samples from a relatively limited group of children, but the results indicate the potential of our
methodological strategy. There is already a known connection between this protein and ASD, which further reinforces the findings,
says Jonas Bergquist, professor of analytical chemistry and neurochemistry at the Department of Chemistry – BMC (Biomedical
Centre) in Uppsala.
The hope is that this new set of biomarkers ultimately will lead to a reliable blood-based
diagnostic tool.
Facts: Autism spectrum disorder is a collective name for neuropsychiatric disturbances that lead
to functional impairment in at least two of the three areas that characterize autism:
-reciprocal social interaction
-reciprocal verbal and non-verbal communication
-imagination and behaviour
ASD comprises:
-Autism
-Asperger’s syndrome
-Disintegrative disorder (Heller’s syndrome)
-Atypical autism
The study was funded
by the Swedish Research Council, among other financiers.
Read the article.
For more information, please contact Jonas Bergquist, mobile: +46 70 962 1393,
jonas.bergquist@kemi.uu.se