Resveratrol in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Behavioral and Molecular Effects
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- To evaluate the behavioral effects of RSV in animal models of ASD.
- (2)
- To summarize the molecular mechanisms by which RSV administration improves behavioral deficits in animal models of ASD.
- (3)
- To review clinical studies with RSV in patients with ASD and its adverse effects.
2. Results
2.1. Behavioral Effects of RSV in Animal Models of ASD
2.2. Molecular Effects of RSV in Animal Models of ASD
2.3. Clinical Studies with RSV in Patients with ASD
3. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Comorbidity | Drug Class |
---|---|
Hyperactivity/inattention | Psychostimulants |
Non-stimulants | |
Sleep alterations | Hormone (Melatonin) |
Antihistamines | |
Irritability | Atypical antipsychotics |
Epilepsy | Antiepileptics |
Aggression | Atypical antipsychotics |
Miscellaneous | Antidepressants (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) |
Mood stabilizers |
Study | Animal Model | Dose RSV, Treatment Duration and Route of Administration | Behavioral Alterations | Main Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bambini-Junior et al., 2014 [24] | Prenatal exposure of valproic acid in Wistar rats | 3.6 mg/kg, subcutaneous. Administered daily for 13 days. | Social memory and preferences (Three chamber sociability and social novelty test). | RSV prevents autistic-like social behaviors. |
Bakheet et al., 2016 [32] | BTBR model | 20–40 mg/kg, intraperitoneally For 7 days. | Self-Grooming (repetitive behavior). | RSV reduced repetitive behavior. |
Bhandari and Kuhad 2017 [30] | Propanoic acid (PPA) infused into the anterior portion of the lateral ventricle in Sprague-Dawley rats | 5, 10, 15 mg/kg. Oral treatment. Administered daily for 27 days after PPA infusion. | Social interaction, stereotypy, locomotor activity, anxiety, spatial learning, memory, depression-like behaviors. | RSV normalizes the social interaction, stereotypy, locomotor activity, anxiety, spatial learning, memory and depression-like behaviors. |
Fontes-Dutra et al., 2018 [25,27] | Prenatal exposure of valproic acid in Wistar rats | 3.6 mg/kg, subcutaneous. Administered daily for 12 days. | Effect on sensory behavior (Nest-seeking behavior and in whisker nuisance task). | RSV improves the percentage of correct choices (reach the nest shavings) per litter. |
Hirsch et al., 2018 [26] | Prenatal exposure to valproic acid in Wistar rats | 3.6 mg/kg, subcutaneous. Administered daily for 12 days. | Reciprocal social interaction test (Social Transmission of Food Preference test). | RSV counteracts the deficit in the social interaction test. |
Xie et al. 2018 [43] | Prenatal and Postnatal exposure to different progestins, and then just norethindrone (20 mg) in Sprague-Dawley rats | 20 mg/kg administered through oral gavage for 28 days (two protocol: prenatal and postnatal treatment). | Repetitive behavior, anxiety, and social interaction test. | RSV recovers the repetitive behavior (Marble burying test) and the deficit found in social interaction test. |
Study | Animal Model of ASD | Dose RSV, Treatment Duration and Route of Administration | Molecular Effects of RSV in ASD Models |
---|---|---|---|
Bakheet et al., 2016 [32] | BTBR model | 20–40 mg/kg, intraperitoneally administered for 7 days. | Decreases the expression (mRNA) levels of CCR and CXCR in the spleen and brain tissues and downregulated the chemokine receptor levels in CD4+ T cells. |
Bakheet et al., 2017 [33] | BTBR model | 20–40 mg/kg, intraperitoneally administered for 7 days. | Suppression of upregulation of T helper 17 (Th17), T helper 2, and T helper 1 cell-related transcription factors and induction of T-reg cell-related transcription factor such as FOX-p3, GATA. |
Bhandari and Kuhad 2017 [30] | Propanoic acid (PPA) infused into the anterior portion of the lateral ventricle in Sprague-Dawley rats | 5, 10, 15 mg/kg. Oral treatment. Administered daily for 27 days after PPA infusion. | Increase the concentration of reduced glutathione, superoxide dismutase and catalase in the brain. Reduction of oxidative stress markers (lipid hydroperoxyde and nitrites). Normalizes brain levels MMP-9 and TNF-alpha. |
Ahmad et al., 2018 [34] | BTBR model | 20–40 mg/kg, intraperitoneally administered for 7 days. | Decreases TLR2, TLR3, TLR4, NF-κB, iNOS, and COX-2 mRNA and protein expression levels in brain. |
Ahmad et al., 2018 [35] | BTBR model | 20–40 mg/kg, intraperitoneally administered for 7 days. | Decreases IL-6, TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma and STAT-3 expression in spleen and in the brain. |
Fontes-Dutra et al., 2018 [25,27] | Prenatal exposure of valproic acid in Wistar rats | 3.6 mg/kg, subcutaneous. Administered daily for 12 days. | Restoration of GABAergic neurons and cortical organization in the primary somato-sensory area and in the amygdala. |
Hirsch et al., 2018 [26] | Prenatal exposure of valproic acid in Wistar rats | 3.6 mg/kg, subcutaneous. Administered daily for 12 days. | Prevention of the augmentation of miR134–5p levels induced by valproic acid. |
Xie et al. 2018 [43] | Prenatal and postnatal exposure to different progestins in rats | 20 mg/kg of through oral gavage for 28 days (two protocol: prenatal and postnatal treatment) | Augmentation of estrogen receptor (ERβ) expression and its target genes by demethylation of DNA and histone on the ERβ promoter. |
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Malaguarnera, M.; Khan, H.; Cauli, O. Resveratrol in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Behavioral and Molecular Effects. Antioxidants 2020, 9, 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox9030188
Malaguarnera M, Khan H, Cauli O. Resveratrol in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Behavioral and Molecular Effects. Antioxidants. 2020; 9(3):188. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox9030188
Chicago/Turabian StyleMalaguarnera, Michele, Haroon Khan, and Omar Cauli. 2020. "Resveratrol in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Behavioral and Molecular Effects" Antioxidants 9, no. 3: 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox9030188
APA StyleMalaguarnera, M., Khan, H., & Cauli, O. (2020). Resveratrol in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Behavioral and Molecular Effects. Antioxidants, 9(3), 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox9030188