PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How evolution explains autism rates in humans

2025-09-09
(Press-News.org) A new paper in Molecular Biology and Evolution, published by Oxford University Press, finds that the relatively high rate of Autism-spectrum disorders in humans is likely due to how humans evolved in the past.

About one in 31 (3.2%) children in the United States has been identified with Autism Spectrum Disorder. Globally, the World Health Organization estimates that around one in 100 children have autism. From an evolutionary perspective, many scientist believe that autism and schizophrenia may be unique to humans. It is very rare to find behaviors associated with the disorders in non-human primates. In addition, behaviors associated with those disorders generally involve cognitive traits like speech production and comprehension that are either unique to or much more sophisticated in humans.

With the development of single cell RNA-sequencing, it became possible to define specific cell types across the brain. As investigators published more large-scale datasets, it became clear that the mammalian brain contains a staggering array of neuronal cell types. In addition, large-scale sequencing studies have identified extensive genetic changes in the brain unique to Homo sapiens—genomic elements that did not change much in mammalian evolution in general but evolved rapidly in humans.

While previous investigations found that some cell types have remained more consistent throughout evolution than others, the factors driving these differences in evolutionary rate remain unknown. Researchers here investigated recently published cross-species single-nucleus RNA sequencing datasets from three distinct regions of the mammalian brain. They found that the most abundant type of outer-layer brain neurons, L2/3 IT neurons, evolved exceptionally quickly in the human lineage compared to other apes. Surprisingly, this accelerated evolution was accompanied by dramatic changes in autism-associated genes, which was likely driven by natural selection specific to the human lineage. The researchers here explain that although the results strongly suggest natural selection for Autism Spectrum Disorder-associated genes, the reason why this conferred fitness benefits to human ancestors is unclear.

Answering this is difficult because we do not know what human-specific features of cognition, brain anatomy, and neuronal wiring gave human ancestors a fitness advantage, but the investigators here speculate that many of these genes are associated with developmental delay, so their evolution could have contributed to the slower postnatal brain development in humans compared to chimpanzees. Furthermore, the capacity for speech production and comprehension unique to humans is often affected by autism and schizophrenia.

It’s possible that the rapid evolution of autism-linked genes conferred a fitness advantage by slowing postnatal brain development or increasing the capacity for language; the lengthier brain development time in early childhood was beneficial to human evolution because it led to more complex thinking.

“Our results suggest that some of the same genetic changes that make the human brain unique also made humans more neurodiverse,” said the paper’s lead author, Alexander L. Starr.

The paper, “A general principle of neuronal evolution reveals a human accelerated neuron type potentially underlying the high prevalence of autism in humans,” is available (at midnight on September 9th) at https://academic.oup.com/mbe/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/molbev/msaf189.

Direct correspondence to: 
Alexander L. Starr
Ph.D. Student in Biology
Stanford University, 
Stanford, CA 94305
astarr97@stanford.edu

To request a copy of the study, please contact:
Daniel Luzer 
daniel.luzer@oup.com

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Swedish psychologist transforms mental health access through digital therapy revolution

2025-09-09
LINKÖPING, SWEDEN, 9 September 2025 -- In a revealing Genomic Press Interview published today in Genomic Psychiatry, Dr. Gerhard Andersson traces his extraordinary journey from skateboarding punk musician to becoming the architect of a global revolution in psychological treatment delivery. The comprehensive interview unveils how two graduate students knocking on his office door in 1998 sparked a transformation that would fundamentally alter how millions access mental healthcare worldwide. From Uppsala Laboratory to Global Impact Dr. Andersson's path to scientific prominence began unexpectedly ...

Centenarian neuroscientist inspires blueprint for vibrant longevity through mentorship and connection

2025-09-09
TUCSON, Arizona, USA, 9 September 2025 -- A viewpoint article published today in Brain Medicine by Dr. Esther Sternberg provides a compelling portrait of how one pioneering neuroscientist continues to thrive beyond his centennial year. The tribute to Dr. Seymour Reichlin, published as part of a special Festschrift commemorating his 100th birthday, examines the multifaceted elements that have sustained his remarkable intellectual vigor and social vitality at 101 years old. Dr. Sternberg, who has directed research at the Andrew Weil Center for Integrative ...

King’s College London researcher advances psychiatric genomics through pioneering polygenic scoring innovations

2025-09-09
LONDON, England, UNITED KINGDOM, 9 September 2025 -- In a compelling Genomic Press Interview published today in Genomic Psychiatry, Dr Oliver Pain reveals how personal experiences and scientific curiosity converged to reshape global approaches to psychiatric genomics. The Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Research Fellow transforms how scientists worldwide understand and apply genetic risk prediction for mental health disorders, developing tools that democratize access to cutting-edge genomic methodologies across international research communities. The interview illuminates Dr Pain's evolution ...

Study questions ocean origin of organics in Enceladus’s plumes

2025-09-09
Organic molecules detected in the watery plumes that spew out from cracks in the surface of Enceladus could be formed through exposure to radiation on Saturn’s icy moon, rather than originating from deep within its sub-surface ocean. The findings, presented during the EPSC–DPS2025 Joint Meeting in Helsinki this week, have repercussions for assessing the habitability of Enceladus’s ocean. ‘While the identification of complex organic molecules in Enceladus’s environment remains an important clue in assessing the moon’s habitability, the results demonstrate that radiation-driven chemistry ...

Look out for the keyhole: How to find the safest spots to deflect a hazardous asteroid

2025-09-09
Selecting the right spot to smash a spacecraft into the surface of a hazardous asteroid to deflect it must be done with great care, according to new research presented at the EPSC-DPS2025 Joint Meeting this week in Helsinki. Slamming into its surface indiscriminately runs the risk of knocking the asteroid through a 'gravitational keyhole' that sends it back around to hit Earth at a later date. "Even if we intentionally push an asteroid away from Earth with a space mission, we must make sure it doesn't drift into one of these ...

The older we get, the fewer favorite songs we have

2025-09-09
Do you think that Spotify's suggestions for new music becomes stranger all the time? It may be because of you. In a unique study with researchers from University of Gothenburg, 15 years of listening data shows that musical taste becomes more refined with age. Music is a strong marker of identity – but what we listen to changes with age. The results may not be that surprising, but now there is scientific evidence for the first time through an analysis of how listening habits change over time. The international study from University of Gothenburg, Jönköping University and University of Primorska, ...

Face‑/edge‑shared 3D perovskitoid single crystals with suppressed ion migration for stable X‑ray detector

2025-09-09
As X-ray detection plays an indispensable role in industrial inspection, medical diagnosis, and security checks, the search for high-performance detection materials has never been more critical. Traditional three-dimensional (3D) metal halide perovskites show great promise for direct X-ray detection, yet their inherent ion migration severely undermines detector stability—hindering commercialization. Now, a collaborative team of researchers from institutions including Henan University, Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology (Chinese Academy of Sciences), and ...

Multiple solutions help fly embryos overcome the fundamental problem of ‘tissue tectonic collision’

2025-09-09
Combining classic comparative approaches, including collecting species from the wild, and cutting-edge light-induced gene manipulation technology, researchers from Japan and Germany have discovered how developing fly embryos solve the fundamental problem of “tissue tectonic collision” when the rapidly expanding head and torso tissues crash into each other. Different species have evolved different solutions, one of which, the ‘cephalic furrow’, has long been a mystery to developmental biologists because it forms and disappears without leaving a trace. For an animal to develop properly, two fundamental processes need to happen: cells need to be ...

GLP-1 weight-loss drugs pose hidden risks for young women

2025-09-09
Women taking popular weight-loss medications during their reproductive years may be unaware of associated risks to pregnancy and unborn babies, warn Flinders University researchers.  A new study has revealed that most Australian women of reproductive age prescribed GLP-1 receptor agonists—medications increasingly used for weight loss such as Ozempic—are not using effective contraception, despite known risks during pregnancy.   Published in the Medical Journal of Australia, the ...

Strategies for enhancing energy‑level matching in perovskite solar cells: An energy flow perspective

2025-09-09
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have rapidly emerged as a front-runner in next-generation photovoltaic technologies, boasting a certified power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 26.95%—now rivaling crystalline silicon and CIGS cells. Yet, a critical bottleneck remains: energy losses stemming from mismatched energy levels between the perovskite absorber and charge transport layers (electron transport layers, ETLs; hole transport layers, HTLs), which hinder charge separation and transport. To address this, a team of researchers from Nanjing Tech University has published a landmark review in Nano-Micro Letters, systematically analyzing strategies to optimize energy-level alignment ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Bee-sting inspired microneedles from Chung-Ang University could revolutionize drug delivery

Pusan National University researchers reveal how uneven ocean warming is altering propagation of the Madden-Julian oscillation

Mapping causality in neuronal activity: towards a better understanding of brain networks

New research identifies IFITM3 as key driver of immunotherapy response in small cell lung cancer

Scientists find curvy answer to harnessing “swarm intelligence”

PALOMA-2 study: Subcutaneous amivantamab every 4 weeks plus lazertinib shows high response rate in EGFR-mutated NSCLC

First 3D real-time imaging of hydrogen’s effect on stainless steel defects opens the way to a safer hydrogen economy

Circulating tumor DNA may guide immunotherapy use in limited-stage SCLC, new study shows

Novel immunotherapy strategy shows promising long-term survival in advanced NSCLC patients with inadequate response to immune checkpoint inhibitors

Surgery after EGFR TKI shows promise in prolonging progression-free survival in metastatic NSCLC

Lung Cancer Europe study highlights communication gaps and need for shared decision-making

FANSS study demonstrates feasibility of U.S.-based lung cancer screening in Asian female nonsmokers

Well-publicized polar geoengineering ideas will not help and could harm, warn experts

Racial stereotypes can make us see weapons where they don’t exist

“Bottlebrush” particles deliver big chemotherapy payloads directly to cancer cells

New AI tool pinpoints genes, drug combos to restore health in diseased cells

Predicting where deadly brain cancer may spread next

First ever measure of boron in individual cancer cells could revolutionise drug understanding

Graz researchers discover what stiffens the aorta

Breakthrough in atomic-level etching of hafnium oxide, a promising material for advanced semiconductors

How evolution explains autism rates in humans

Swedish psychologist transforms mental health access through digital therapy revolution

Centenarian neuroscientist inspires blueprint for vibrant longevity through mentorship and connection

King’s College London researcher advances psychiatric genomics through pioneering polygenic scoring innovations

Study questions ocean origin of organics in Enceladus’s plumes

Look out for the keyhole: How to find the safest spots to deflect a hazardous asteroid

The older we get, the fewer favorite songs we have

Face‑/edge‑shared 3D perovskitoid single crystals with suppressed ion migration for stable X‑ray detector

Multiple solutions help fly embryos overcome the fundamental problem of ‘tissue tectonic collision’

GLP-1 weight-loss drugs pose hidden risks for young women

[Press-News.org] How evolution explains autism rates in humans