Lactonase activity and Lipoprotein-Phospholipase A2 as possible novel serum biomarkers for the differential diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders and rett syndrome: Results from a pilot study

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Abstract

Rett syndrome (RTT) and autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are not merely expression of brain dysfunction but also reflect the perturbation of physiological/metabolic homeostasis. Accordingly, both disorders appear to be associated with increased vulnerability to toxicants produced by redox imbalance, inflammation, and pollution, and impairment of systemic-detoxifying agents could play a role in the exacerbation of these detrimental processes. To check this hypothesis, the activities of two mechanistically related blood-based enzymes, paraoxonase-1 (arylesterase, paraoxonase, and lactonase), and lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) were measured in the serum of 79 ASD and 95 RTT patients, and 77 controls. Lactonase and Lp-PLA2 showed a similar trend characterized by significantly lower levels of both activities in ASD compared to controls and RTT (p < 0.001 for all pairwise comparisons). Noteworthy, receiving operator curve (ROC) analysis revealed that lactonase and, mostly, Lp-PLA2 were able to discriminate between ASD and controls (lactonase: area under curve, AUC = 0.660; Lp-PLA2, AUC = 0.780), and, considering only females, between ASD and RTT (lactonase, AUC = 0.714; Lp-PLA2, AUC = 0.881). These results suggest that lactonase and, especially, Lp-PLA2 activities might represent novel candidate biomarkers for ASD.

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Hayek, J., Cervellati, C., Crivellari, I., Pecorelli, A., Valacchi, G., & Perrone, S. (2017). Lactonase activity and Lipoprotein-Phospholipase A2 as possible novel serum biomarkers for the differential diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders and rett syndrome: Results from a pilot study. Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/5694058

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