4.5 Article

Bacterial Modification of the Association Between Arsenic and Autism-Related Social Behavior Scores

Journal

EXPOSURE AND HEALTH
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 347-354

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12403-022-00494-0

Keywords

Arsenic; Autism; Social Responsiveness Scale; Branched chain amino acids; Infant gut microbiome; Metagenomic sequencing

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Arsenic is associated with social behaviors, and the infant gut microbiome may modify this association.
Arsenic is related to neurodevelopmental outcomes and is associated with the composition of the gut microbiome. Data on the modifying role of the microbiome are limited. We probed suggestive relationships between arsenic and social behaviors to quantify the modifying role of the infant gut microbiome. We followed children for whom arsenic concentrations were quantified in 6-week-old toenail clippings. Scores on the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS-2), which measures autism-related social behaviors, were provided by caregivers when the child was approximately 3 years of age. Metagenomic sequencing was performed on infant stools collected at 6 weeks and 1 year of age. To evaluate modification by the top ten most abundant species and functional pathways, we modeled SRS-2 total T-scores as a function of arsenic concentrations, microbiome features dichotomized at their median, and an interaction between exposure and the microbiome, adjusting for other trace elements and sociodemographic characteristics. As compared to the standardized population (SRS-2 T-scores = 50), participants in our study had lower SRS-2 scores (n = 78, mean = 44, SD = 5).The relative abundances of several functional pathways identified in 6-week stool samples modified the arsenic-SRS-2 association, including the pathways of valine and isoleucine biosynthesis; we observed no association among those with high relative abundance of each pathway [beta = - 0.67 (95% CI - 1.46, 0.12)], and an adverse association [beta = 1.67 (95% CI 0.3, 3.04), p(interaction) = 0.05] among infants with low relative abundance. Our findings indicate the infant gut microbiome may alter neurodevelopmental susceptibility to environmental exposures.

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