Association of NEF2L2 Rs35652124 Polymorphism with Nrf2 Induction and Genotoxic Stress Biomarkers in Autism.
Lev N PorokhovnikVladimir M PisarevAnastasia G ChumachenkoJulia M ChudakovaElizaveta S ErshovaNatalia N VeikoNatalia L GorbachevskayaUliana A MamokhinaAlexander B SorokinAnna Ya BasovaMikhail S LapshinVera L IzhevskayaSvetlana V KostyukPublished in: Genes (2023)
Increased oxidative/genotoxic stress is known to impact the pathophysiology of ASD (autism spectrum disorder). Clinical studies, however, reported limited, heterogeneous but promising responses to treatment with antioxidant remedies. We determined whether the functional polymorphism of the Nrf2 gene, master regulator of anti-oxidant adaptive reactions to genotoxic stress, links to the genotoxic stress responses and to an in vitro effect of a NRF2 inductor in ASD children. Oxidative stress biomarkers, adaptive responses to genotoxic/oxidative stress, levels of master antioxidant regulator Nrf2 and its active form pNrf2 before and after inducing by dimethyl fumarate (DMF), and promotor rs35652124 polymorphism of NFE2L2 gene encoding Nrf2 were studied in children with ASD ( n = 179). Controls included healthy adults ( n = 101). Adaptive responses to genotoxicity as indicated by H2AX and cytoprotection by NRF2 contents positively correlated in ASD children with a Spearman coefficient of R = 0.479 in T+, but not CC genotypes. ASD children with NRF2 rs35652124 CC genotype demonstrated significantly higher H2AX content (0.652 vs. 0.499 in T+) and pNrf2 induction by DMF, lowered 8-oxo-dG concentration in plasma and higher cfDNA/plasma nuclease activity ratio. Our pilot findings suggest that in ASD children the NEF2L2 rs35652124 polymorphism impacts adaptive responses that may potentially link to ASD severity. Our data warrant further studies to reveal the potential for NEF2L2 genotype-specific and age-dependent repurposing of DMF and/or other NRF2-inducing drugs.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- autism spectrum disorder
- intellectual disability
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- young adults
- dna damage
- diabetic rats
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- induced apoptosis
- genome wide
- magnetic resonance imaging
- anti inflammatory
- dna methylation
- computed tomography
- climate change
- randomized controlled trial
- working memory
- magnetic resonance
- single cell