NYITCOM Researchers on the Scent

Kim Campo| October 11, 2023

In a new study, Assistant Professor of Biomedical Sciences Gonzalo Otazu, Ph.D., of the College of Osteopathic Medicine(NYITCOM), continues to pursue clues that could help explain how sense of smell is impacted in individuals with autism.   

People with autism have an “insistence on sameness” and often avoid unfamiliar elements, including new smells and foods, which can impact their quality of life. While many studies have focused on the behavioral features of autism, additional research is needed to help explain its sensory aspects. 

Otazu and his research team have been closely following a trail of scientific evidence that could help bridge the gap. In September, the team published a research paper in The Journal of Neuroscience, which found that the brain’s neurological processes responsible for smell differed in mice with a mutation in SHANK3, a gene linked to autism. The findings reinforce Otazu’s earlier Nature Communications study, published in February, which demonstrated the same deficit in mice with a mutation in the gene CNTNAP2, which is also linked to autism. AutismAndScentDaryaRyndychAlisonSeboldAtConference

DARYA RYNDYCH (LEFT) AND ALISON SEBOLD (RIGHT) SHARED THE SHANK3 FINDINGS AT A CONFERENCE, WHERE THE DUO WON FIRST PLACE IN THE POSTER PRESENTATION.

In both experiments, the researchers trained two groups of mice—one group with a gene mutation linked to autism (CNTNAP2 in one study, SHANK3 in the other) and one neurotypical group (wild-type mice)—to recognize familiar scents. Then, the mice were tasked with identifying these scents as new, unfamiliar odors were introduced in the background. While the neurotypical mice were able to “filter out” the new background odors and identify target scents, in both studies, the mice with the gene mutations linked to autism struggled to do so. 

In their latest paper, Otazu and his co-authors write: 

“People and mice with mutations in a single copy in the synaptic gene SHANK3 show features seen in autism spectrum disorders, including social interaction deficits…Here we used a recently developed task to show that these mice could identify odors in the presence of known background odors as well as wild-type mice. However, their performance fell below wild-type mice when challenged with novel background odors. This deficit was also previously reported in the CNTNAP2 mouse model of autism, suggesting that odor detection in novel backgrounds is a general deficit across mouse models of autism.” 

The SHANK3 study is also gaining attention outside of the laboratory. Two NYITCOM students involved in the research, Darya Ryndych and Alison Sebold, recently shared the team’s findings in a poster presentation at a New York State Osteopathic Medical Society conference, where the duo won first place in the event’s poster contest. 

Other collaborators involved in the study included NYITCOM student Alyssa Strassburg and Associate Professor Raddy Ramos, Ph.D.

By Kim Tucker Campo

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