Collaborative ECHO research led by Vanja Klepac-Ceraj, PhD, of Wellesley College, and Juliette C. Madan, MD, MS, of Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, investigates the relationship between the infant gut microbiome and childhood autism-related traits. This research, titled “Prospective Association of the Infant Gut Microbiome with Social Behaviors in the ECHO Consortium,” is published in Molecular Autism.
The study sought to identify gut bacteria linked to social traits and brain development in two ECHO Cohort Study Sites. Researchers found that certain features of the gut microbiome of infants were associated with higher scores on the Social Responsiveness Scale-2 (SRS-2), a questionnaire that measures autism-related traits. Specifically, certain bacteria and their functional genes, particularly those related to the production of short-chain fatty acids, were linked to autism-related traits. These associations varied between sex and age groups.
“The findings of this study help us understand the potential likelihood of autism-related traits through the gut-brain axis,” said Dr. Klepac-Ceraj. “This understanding could open up new avenues for targeted early interventions.”
Researchers studied 481 samples from 304 healthy child participants from ECHO Cohort study sites in New Hampshire and Rhode Island. The children were between 6 weeks and 2 years old when they provided stool samples and between 3 and 19 years old when social traits were assessed.
In this study, researchers compared groups of participants from two different study sites, focusing on their gut microbiomes when they were younger and social traits related to ASD at a later age. Both study sites contributing to this analysis had previously sequenced bacterial DNA from fecal samples collected from infants or toddlers. They calculated how common certain bacteria were in each sample and related that to the participant’s social behavior scores.
Future studies could explore interventions that could change the gut bacteria and potentially influence how the brain develops. Researchers also plan to investigate the influence of the developing gut microbiome on other neurobehavioral outcomes, such as anxiety and depression.