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- American Physiological Society
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APS Neurohypophyseal Conference Keynoter
Larry Young: The
Serendipitous Role Of The Vole And Other Animal Models In
The Search For Answers About Autism
APS
meeting highlights shift toward OT/VP and social behavior;
Difference in OT/VP brain function is the environmental impact
Based on earlier work by Thomas Insel and Sue Carter
on voles, Young’s laboratory has focused on OT, VP and the brain’s reward
system. His studies “demonstrate that vole species differences in OT
receptor and VP1a receptor (VP1aR) expression patterns in the brain likely
underlie species differences in social organization.”
“These observations have important implications for
psychiatric disorders characterized by disruptions in social cognition and
reciprocity, such as autism. Several autism studies are consistent with a
role for OT and VP in this devastating disease of the social brain,” Young
noted. “These studies include altered processing and decreased plasma OT
in autistic children, and linkage disequilibrium between the VP1aR
microsatellite and autism. Thus animal and clinical studies suggest that
disregulation of OT and VP systems could potentially contribute to the
disrupted social phenotype found in autism spectrum disorder,” he said.
However, Young cautioned, more studies need to be
conducted to confirm a role for these peptides in autism. “If you study
the normal neurobiology of social behavior, you can gain insights into
specific brain mechanisms that may be disrupted in autism. But there are
other deficits, and so I’m sure autism is a complex neural development
disease. But you have to focus on one of the ‘deficits’ at a time. For
social behavior, we had to see what neural chemicals and genes are
involved,” Young explained.
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provides a wide range of research, educational and career support and
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Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM).
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