Autism Research Breakthrough

Scientists find neurotransmitter that ties in with disorder’s behavior

Written byHarvard University
| 4 min read
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In a discovery that could offer valuable insights into understanding, diagnosing, and even treating autism, Harvard University scientists for the first time have linked a specific neurotransmitter in the brain with autistic behavior.

Using a visual test that prompts different reactions in autistic and normal brains, a research team led by Caroline Robertson, a junior fellow of the Harvard Society of Fellows, was able to show that those differences were associated with a breakdown in the signaling pathway used by GABA, one of the brain’s chief inhibitory neurotransmitters. The study is described in a Dec. 17 paper in the journal Current Biology.

Related article: Multiple Models Reveal New Genetic Links in Autism

“This is the first time, in humans, that a neurotransmitter in the brain has been linked to autistic behavior—full stop,” Robertson said. “This theory that the GABA signaling pathway plays a role in autism has been shown in animal models, but until now we never had evidence for it actually causing autistic differences in humans.”

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