http://home.att.net/~pediatricaac/HYPOTHESIS/MEDICAL_HYPOTHESIS_ARTICLE.html
IS AUTISM A G-ALPHA PROTEIN DEFECT
REVERSIBLE WITH NATURAL VITAMIN A?
Mary N. Megson, M.D., F.A.A.P.
Developmental Pediatrician
Pediatric and Adolescent Ability Center
7229 Forest Avenue
Suite 211
Richmond, VA 23226
Fax: 804-673-9195
Abstract
Autism may be a disorder linked to the disruption of the G-alpha protein,
affecting retinoid receptors in the brain. A study of sixty autistic children
suggests that autism may be caused by inserting a G-alpha protein defect, the
pertussis toxin found in the D.P.T. vaccine, into genetically at-risk children.
This toxin separates the G-alpha protein from retinoid receptors. Those most at
risk report a family history of at least one parent with a pre-existing G-alpha
protein defect, including night blindness, pseudohypoparathyroidism or adenoma
of the thyroid or pituitary gland.
Natural Vitamin A may reconnect the retinoid receptors critical for vision,
sensory perception, language processing and attention. Autism spectrum
disorders have increased from 1 in 10,000 in 1978 to 1 in 300 is some US
communities in 1999. Recent evidence indicates that autism is a disorder of the
nervous system and the immune system, affecting multiple metabolic pathways.
Autism has been defined by DSM-IV criteria as a childhood behavioral
and neurological disorder with onset prior to three years of age. Autistic
children and adults have qualitative impairments in social interaction and
communication, including either a delay in or complete lack of language
development. Furthermore, many people with autism engage in restrictive
patterns of behavior including rigid adherence to routines and/or repetitive
motor mannerisms such as hand flapping (1).
Autistic spectrum disorders have increased from 1 in 10,000 in 1978 to 1 in
300 is some US communities in 1999 (2). Recent evidence indicates that autism
is a disorder of the nervous system and the immune system, and it affects
multiple metabolic pathways.
This study of 60 autistic children and their families suggests that inserting
a G-alpha protein defect, namely the pertussis toxin in the D.P.T. vaccine, (3)
into genetically at-risk children causes autism. This toxin separates the
G-alpha protein from retinoid receptors. Those most at risk report a family
history of at least one parent with a pre-existing G-alpha protein defect,
exhibited in disorders such as night blindness, pseudohypoparathyroidism or
adenoma of the thyroid or pituitary gland (4).
This hypothesis asserts that treating these children with natural cis forms
of Vitamin A may have the effect of reconnecting the hippocampal retinoid
receptor pathways that are critical for vision, sensory perception, language
processing and attention (5).
Many of these especially vulnerable children have tissue types of HREs DR 3,
DR4, and DR5 (6). These particular tissue types form the tightest bonds with
blocked RAR and RXR retinoid receptors (7).
Autism is a true developmental disorder. Many of these children are exposed
to wheat at nine months, followed by exposure to the measles antigen at 12 to
15 months (8). The human measles antibody that is produced cross-reacts with
intermediate filaments, which are known to be important for maintaining tight
junctions and gap junctions between cells, gut mucosal integrity and cell to
cell communication (10)(11).
Many of these children, who need natural, unsaturated cis forms of Vitamin A
found in sources such as cold water fish like salmon, or cod, liver, kidney,
and milk fat, are not getting this in the modern diet. Instead, they are
dependent on Vitamin A Palmitate, found in commercial infant formula and low
fat milk. Unfortunately, absorption of Vitamin A Palmitate requires an intact
gut mucosal microvilli surface at the right PH, in the presence of bile for
metabolism (12). However, many of these children already have damaged mucosal
surfaces due to unrecognized wheat allergy or intolerances.
The Role of Vaccinations in G-Alpha Protein Defects
When the live viral measles vaccine is given, it depletes the children of
their existing supply of Vitamin A (13), which negatively impacts the retinoid
receptors. Natural Vitamin A, in the cis form, is important for activation of T
and B cells for long-term immune memory to develop (14) and is necessary for
natural killer cell function (15). Scrimshaw, et al. (1968) reviewed over 50
studies of infection and nutrition and wrote, "no nutritional deficiency
in the animal kingdom is more consistently synergistic with infection than that
of Vitamin A" (16).
If artificial Vitamin A Palmitate binds the now free G-alpha protein, it
deactivates by 90% the "off switch" for multiple metabolic pathways,
involved in vision and cell growth, and disrupts hormonal regulation and
metabolism of lipids, protein and glycogen (17). Measles, mumps and rubella titers
are either significantly elevated or negative, in spite of one or two doses of
the vaccine given to many of these children. Fish oils contain one retinoid
metabolite, alpha 14 hydroxyretroretinol that has a role in T-cell activation,
vision and growth of lymphoblasts (18). Further research is needed to
understand the complete role of these metabolites in the immune system.
At 18 months of age, when the pertussis toxin is added, as
"lymphocytosis proliferating factor," it creates a chronic autoimmune
monocytic infiltration of the lamina propia in the gut mucosa (19) and may
disconnect the G-alpha protein pathways, leaving some G-alpha modulated
pathways unopposed. Consequently, the non-specific branch of the immune system
is turned on, and without retinoid switching, cannot be down-regulated. The
metabolic consequences could be far-reaching.
These 60 children and their families reveal possible consequences of losing
the "off-switch" in G-alpha protein modulated pathways through
abnormalities in lipid, glucose and protein metabolism in hormone regulation
and in oncogene suppression and autoimmune disorders.
Case Studies
Our early experience with treatment with natural cis forms of Vitamin A in
Cod Liver Oil (CLO) in these autistic children, followed by stimulation of blocked
acetylcholine receptors for neurotransmitters affected with a blockage of
G-alpha pathways in the cell, is promising. There are dramatic, immediate
improvements in language, vision, attention and social interaction in some of
these children, as evidenced by the following case reports.
My earliest evidence came from a ten-year-old boy diagnosed with autism by
DSM-IV criteria (20). The patient’s parents suspect he has been reading since
age four but his inability to communicate made this unverifiable. Over an
eight-year period of regular visits I had never heard him speak. Standardized
IQ tests revealed moderate mental retardation. His mother developed night
blindness and hypothyroidism in college and had responded well to Vitamin A and
thyroid hormone replacement. The patient’s mother’s sister was diagnosed in
infancy with gluten enteropathy that had improved on a gluten free diet. She
has had lifelong dry eyes and is night blind (treated with amber glasses.)
For these and other reasons I started the boy on cod liver oil (5,000 IU of
Vitamin A, given in 2500 IU/b.i.d.) and a gluten free diet. After one week, he
began to sit farther from the television and to notice paintings on the walls
at home. He had always gone out of his way to follow the sidewalk and driveway
to meet the school bus. On Vitamin A, he began to run across the grass directly
from the front door to the school bus. After three weeks, he was given a single
dose of Urocholine, an alpha muscarinic receptor agonist, to increase bile and
pancreatic secretions and indirectly stimulate hippocampal retinoid receptors.
It has minimal cardiac effect, is FDA approved, has been used safely in
children since the 1970’s for reflux, and does not cross the blood-brain
barrier, unlike secretin (21). It stimulates post-synaptic cell membranes via
receptors for acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter in the parasympathetic system.
Thirty minutes after administration of the Urocholine, the patient, who was
sitting in a chair, swung his feet over the side, pointed to a glass candy jar
on my shelf and said, "May I have the red Jolly Rancher® please?" He
had read the label on the candy in the clear jar. These were the first words he
had spoken in eight years, and the first proof that he could read. We took him
outside and he said, "The leaves, the leaves on the trees are green! I
see! I see!" When I asked to take his picture he looked at the camera,
smiled and waved. When he left the office I said, "See you later." He
asked, "What time?"
In this child’s case, after several weeks of treatment with Vitamin A in CLO
3500 IU/day, the Urocholine acted like a switch. When absorbed, he immediately
became socially engaged, made excellent eye contact, hugged his mother tightly
and said, "I love you so much," looking at her face. At that point we
both realized that this child had a blocked pathway. The change in language and
social interaction was dramatic and immediate. Yet he reverted to the
pre-treatment state of silence when the dose wore off. On lower daily doses of
Urocholine (12.5 mg bid) along with the Vitamin A, his language and social
interactions have continued to progress, albeit slowly.
I discussed the case with Dr. Bernard Rimland, head of the Autism Research
Institute. He called me later to get permission for a mother in Kentucky to
call me. She was frantic because her fourteen-week-old infant had stopped
making eye contact, began to stare at lights and fans, stopped cooing and
laughing and no longer turned to sound after early normal development. The
mother reported she was night blind and had irritable bowel syndrome. By
mother’s report, the infant was weaned and placed on standard formula, which
was tolerated well. An audiological evaluation revealed normal auditory brain
stem responses and tympanograms. The child went to a pediatric Ophthalmologist,
who stated the child was farsighted. The exam was otherwise normal. The doctor
was unable to get the infant to track in daylight, but when he placed an amber
screen in front of his eyes he would easily track all objects.
I spoke with the child’s pediatrician who obtained a Vitamin A level. The
value was 26 ug/dl (normal is 30-90 ug/dl). I instructed the mother to add 0.85
cc of CLO (Vitamins A/D) of cod liver oil to a bottle that night, and 0.85 cc
CLO to a bottle at 11 am the next day. When the baby woke from his nap, he was
back to normal, smiling, laughing, turning to sound, and tracking objects. As a
developmental pediatrician, I have followed his development. By his mother’s
reports, his receptive and expressive language, cognition, fine and gross motor
skills are all normal for his age of nine months. He has remained on 0.85 cc
CLO without significant increase in his vitamin A and D levels. He has had
further immunizations without regression.
In both cases the improvement was so dramatic that it seemed we were dealing
with a blocked pathway, presumably in the hippocampus or amygdala, with an
intact cortex.
Effects of Blocked Retinoid Receptors
In December 1998, Ron Evans et al., at Cornell, isolated RAR-B and RXR
receptors in the hippocampus in mice, which, when blocked, created long-term
potentiation and depression of neurotransmission (22). The hippocampal pathways
are important in spatial learning and memory. When mice with these blocked
receptors were put in a maze, and then the maze was changed, these mice never
learned to accommodate for the change. However, both normal mice and blind mice
easily learned the new pathway with subsequent trials. Evans reported that
these mutations affected cognitive functions such as learning and memory and
reports that the mice acted as if "they had significant visual perceptual
deficits." (23)
Of note, the hippocampus, on staining and electromagnetic exam, revealed no
anatomic abnormalities. Presynaptic and post-synaptic responses were normal
(24), so the authors concluded that the changes involved changes in inhibition
or potentiation at the cellular level. The authors suggested that lack of
retinoid signaling did not affect neuronal development (25).
Six of the autistic children I have tested also have had hypothyroidism.
Recently reported was the association of central hypothyroidism when RXR
receptors were blocked (26). These RXR receptors are nonspecific members of the
superhormone receptor system, and have been identified as calcitonin/secretin,
thyroid and retinoid receptors specific for binding with the short carbon chain
cis forms of Vitamin A, found in liver, kidney, milk fat and CLO (27).
In the cell membrane, in the hippocampus (28) and retina (29) are G-alpha
proteins with RXR and RAR-B receptors that potentiate or depress the signal in
a given cell (30). Congenital night blindness is caused by a single protein
deletion in G-alpha membrane proteins inside the cell attached to the retinoid receptors
which traverse the cell wall, leading to decreased potentiation of the signal
(29). Normally, the signal is amplified ten million times from stimulation by
the time it exits the G protein coil, providing night vision in conditions of
very low light. Gi alpha inhibits cAMP synthesis, closes Ca+ channels and opens
K+ channels, while Gs alpha has the opposite effect (30). Both stimulatory and
inhibitory G-alpha proteins modulate acetylcholine and adrenergic amines,
neurotransmitters and chemokines, all affected in autism (31).
Vitamin A and Urocholine
Autism may be a disorder linked to the disruption of the G-alpha protein and
the resulting effects on the retinoid receptors. These cell membrane proteins
are coils that modulate sensory input. Cis forms of retinoids may act by
replacing these receptors and by easily penetrating the cell membrane for more
direct effects on nuclear retinoid pathways.
Many children treated with Vitamin A in CLO for two months followed by
Urocholine show an immediate improvement in their autistic behaviors including
improved eye contact, ability to socialize, and increased language use. Many
have been able to toilet train easily and have begun to sleep through the
night. Postganglionic parasympathetic muscarinic receptors innervate the bowel
and bladder through sacral roots, and the pineal gland where melatonin is
produced, through fibers from the upper cervical ganglia. This may be why the
children are able to improve their sleep cycles and to toilet train on
Urocholine and natural Vitamin A.
One of the first improvements noted on Vitamin A in CLO in children is the
dis-appearance of the "sideways" glance at people and objects. By
doing this, these children with poor rod function are getting their best three
dimensional view of the object by directing light through the pupil onto the
fovea (32), which is off-center in the retina, the area of the greatest
intensity of red and green cones and greatest acuity. Improved eye contact is
noted almost immediately in the autistic children on Vitamin A.
Importance of Binding Proteins
Cellular retinaldehyde-binding protein is important in transferring retinal
from the photoreceptor to the retinal plasma epithelia. This binding protein is
found in the retina and pineal gland. The human genome has sequence
similarities with yeast SEC14 protein, which stimulates secretory activity of
the Golgi apparatus (33).* These Muller
cells are Potassium sinks, which are RXR and RAR-B receptors modulated by
G-alpha proteins (34). If depolarization here is not "intensified"
because of a G-alpha protein defect, this may decrease the stimulus to the
brain from the neural retina. This protein binds only the 11-cis and other di
and tri cis isomers of retinaldehyde to form a stable complex with opsin, the
forms found in CLO (36).
P19 cells are neuron stem cells, which, in their response to their RXR and
RAR receptors being stimulated by retinoic acid, undergo cell differentiation.
As these cells differentiate, they express characteristics of epithelial cells.
Many syndromes with neurocutaneous markers are associated with autism. These
cells, upon differentiation, have a small voltage outward current, but when
differentiated have large inward sodium, potassium and CA+ currents. As mature
cells they synthesize acetylcholine, not catecholamines (37). Urocholine
stimulates alpha muscarinic postganglionic parasympathetic acetylcholine
receptors. Affected G proteins, trimeric guanine nucleotide binding proteins,
rely on signals from protons, hormones, odorants, and neurotransmitters and
either decrease transmission, causing less effect when stimulated by hormones,
or increase transmission (38). Sensory abnormalities seen in these children may
be due to a lack of modulation in signal in the cell membrane, but this warrants
further study.
Abnormal Lipid Profiles
Also, there appeared to be a very high incidence of abnormal lipid profiles
in the children. These serum values were drawn prior to the administration of
Vitamin A in CLO, due to the known effect of retinol and the synthetic
retinoids causing hyperlipidemia. Doses of Vitamin A in CLO in our trial are
far below minimal supplemental doses required to induce elevations of lipids,
especially triglycerides and VLDL. Of note, supplementation with fish oils with
eicosapentenoic acid (EPA) and decosahexenoic acid (DHA) has been reported to
reduce these lipid levels (39).
Blocked Neurotransmission
For many of these children, autism represents blocked neurotransmission that
can be reconnected. Correcting immunodysfunction and their metabolic disorders
will be important for prevention of future early heart, endocrine and malignant
disorders of endothelial origin.
To quote Alfred Gilman, winner of the Nobel Prize for his discovery of
G-alpha proteins, we have been "barbarians at the gate" of cellular
function in multiple organ systems (40). These children have been devastated
and we have abandoned them and their families from healthcare and
rehabilitative services and appropriate educational opportunities.
The far-reaching metabolic consequences may be enormous, with potential
links to not only autism, but dyslexia, attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD), bi-polar disorder, schizophrenia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,
fibromyalgia, Type II hyperlipidemia, gluten enteropathy, cancer of the mucous
secreting glands, and autoimmune disorders including muscular dystrophy and
rheumatoid arthritis. S-Adenosylmethionine (SAMe), called a supernutrient, is
an enzyme-important in acetylcholine synthesis. Loss of gut mucosal integrity
would decrease by 85% gut absorption of CoA, shunting choline into homocysteine
production. Increased production of acetylcholine may explain why a continuous
dietary source of this nutrient makes people with multiple disorders feel
better. Increased serum homocysteine levels have previously been associated
with early cardiac disease (41). The incidence of mucous-secreting malignancies
in parents and grandparents of the children in the study was 62 cases within 60
families. Cases of adenocarcinoma of the colon alone were seen in 1 in every 4
families when the lifetime risk is approximately 4 percent (42).
The current clinical trial using Vitamin A in CLO vs. placebo in a double
blind, cross-over study is necessary prior to a trial using Vitamin A and
Urocholine. Data from this trial is important and will have very broad
ramifications, including rethinking infant formula composition and timing of
immunizations. If this hypothesis is correct, we are one step closer to
treatment and prevention of autism.
REFERENCES
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