rdos wrote:Sophist wrote:This is assuming that the roots of autism lie solely in genetics rather than epigenetic mechanisms.
Not so. Currently, the 23andme test can only explain 10% of neurodiversity. We still lack 90%. OTOH, the present result is not evidence that 90% of neurodiversity is environmental or epigenetic. Other possible reasons for the low amount is that 23andme only uses SNPs, and not CNVs. A test that compared CNVs could potentially get a much higher correlation that might explain much of neurodiversity. About the only thing we know is that at a minimum Neanderthal DNA can explain 10% of neurodiversity. Then we have the difference between ASD diagnosis, and neurodiversity as defined by Aspie Quiz. They have a little above 0.8 in correlation, but that means that they don't share 30-35% of the traits. These 30-35% are probably mostly environmental issues.
What I meant is that is not how DNA nor the cell works. There is far more phenotypic diversity that lies within the machinery of the cell above the DNA. That includes literal epigenetic mechanisms such as heritable histones and methylation patterns, but that also includes lipid construction, various endogenous and foreign RNAs, and loads more effectors than even I know about. An extremely large portion of inheritance does not lie within the DNA itself. And a large portion of phenotypic variation is "inherited" simply by nature of common environment, generation by generation, not by something inherent to the organism itself, other than plasticity.
The concept of development and diversity does not work like the media, or even many scientists, portray it. And I realize it's difficult for people who haven't studied this area of science to understand the general concept. But I've studied enough to know how MUCH I still don't know; but I generally know what I don't know. And I'm telling you, and anyone else who has similar misconceptions, placing such emphasis on DNA is not how biology truly works. I'm just advising caution on making assumptions based on a generalized and inaccurate concept of DNA-centered inheritance. DNA makes a good molecular clock of general relatedness, but that is on a really grand scale, species by species. It doesn't tell you how the person you're looking at in front of you came to be.
If there is indeed some relation between Neandertal DNA within the human genome and autism, then you're missing tens of thousands of years of history in between. Are you assuming that the rates of autism have been constant throughout, medical issues like birth fatality aside? Because at present, research does not suggest that to be the case, even in lieu of broadening definitions and greater awareness. If there is indeed a link between cross-breeding of Neandertals and humans and then autism today, how do you explain the changing rates? What is it about the environment and that Neandertal DNA that might be changing our populations' phenotype, autism with it?
I'll tell you something: in Manny's work looking at microscopic structural changes of the cortex just within the last generation, there have been considerable changes in the tail ends of the human spectrum measured. Changes in minicolumnar phenotype, reflective of more big brains and more smaller brains, the extremes of that spectrum, have changed just within 20-30 years. One generation.
In addition, the Neandertal SNPs associated with ASC: what is the proposed function of some of these genes? Why and how are they relevant to autism? Just some questions I had.
mamasatya wrote:Sophist wrote:This is assuming that the roots of autism lie solely in genetics rather than epigenetic mechanisms.
Viewing genetics as a "cause" of anything reveals a poor understanding of biology and development in general.
Quite right! The way I look at it, it's like saying the blueprint for a building is the cause of a building (or the reason for designing it a particular way). Even if you could pour building materials and fuel onto the blueprint and have the building magically spring into existence (DNA works this way, sort of) it's still not the 'cause' of the building.
Sophist how do you feel about the 'cannibal / hypernutrition / weather / no more cannibals' suite of hypotheses for autism?
Sorry I missed this earlier. To be honest, I'm not familiar with the hypotheses, nor would I have much to hypothesize re some of these issues on my own accord. I don't know enough about cannibalism throughout metazoan evolution. Climate is an ever-present factor and undoubtedly alters phenotype of all individuals. Autistics wouldn't be immune to such effects. Hypernutrition: not sure. I definitely think many aspects of diet, particularly maternal diet during gestation, play roles in the development of ASC. For instance, there are some links between endocrine disruption, e.g., diabetes, and ASC risk. If the mother, for instance, has insulin resistance but keeps a carb-high diet, and the level of endocrine disruption has a positive link to severity of ASC, then diet could definitely drive a more severe autistic phenotype. But for "hypernutrition". What are we getting too much of? Many times, in today's society, I think we are getting too much of certain things but then too little of others. So is "hyper" really accurate?
These variables are far too complex to simply look at each one alone. The relationship is the most important unit for analysis. Though we give autism a single label, it's extremely heterogeneous. As heterogeneous as any two strangers taken from the street at random. And the autistic phenotype is dynamic, not static.
In order to assess situations, it is initially necessary to simplify things to a single effector and test a hypothesis. But autism isn't that simple. It's many things. There are as many forms of autism as there are autistic people. It's a similar argument in how to define a species, or how to define life itself. That's because such concepts are okay enough for broad generalization but when you zoom in to take a closer look and test concrete hypotheses, the concept falls to pieces. Not dissimilar to Newton's laws of physics when looked at from grander or quantum scales.
I think we will continue to identify commonalities which include most of the autistic population. But I think as time goes on, we will learn more by defining exactly how all these people are different from one another. In such instances, in depth case studies may even be helpful, rather than broad studies that look at averages.
I wish rdos all the luck in the world; he's a good guy and a hard worker, as well as highly inventive. For my own part, I don't place my scientific faith in Neandertal DNA as a root of autism. That doesn't mean I wish him wrong. With his persistence, if there's real clout to his concepts, he'll eventually prove me wrong. And that's fine too. But for my current concepts of autism, Neandertals don't fit into the framework of how I understand the conditions.