Jill James Explained

Sandra Jill James
Fields:Autism, Metabolism
Workplaces:Arkansas Children's Hospital
Alma Mater:Mills College, University of California, Los Angeles
Thesis Title:Alterations in macrophage and T cell immune activity in the zinc deficient mouse
Thesis Url:https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/14349379
Thesis Year:1986
Known For:Discovery of metabolic abnormalities in autistic children

Sandra Jill James is an American biochemist and autism researcher who studies metabolic autism biomarkers. She works at Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute, where she is the director of the Metabolic Genomics Laboratory, as well as the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences's department of pediatrics, where she has worked since 2002.[1] [2] She is also a member of the Autism Speaks Treatment Advisory Board,[3] and is also a scientific advisor to the autism foundation N of One.[4] Her current research focuses on the role of epigenetics in causing autism, as well as the effectiveness of supplements as a treatment for autism and the potential existence of abnormal metabolism in autistic children. This research is funded by a 5-year grant from the National Institutes of Health entitled "Metabolic biomarkers of autism: predictive potential and genetic susceptibility," as well as by a grant from Autism Speaks.[5]

Education

James obtained her bachelor's degree in biology from Mills College in 1962, followed by an M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1982 and 1986, respectively.[6]

Research

James, while at the NCTR, conducted research on the role of DNA methylation and cancer susceptibility, and also studied metabolic differences in children with Down syndrome.[7] Her studies of children with Down syndrome showed that they have abnormal methionine metabolic pathways.[8]

Leukemia

James has also researched children suffering from leukemia in Fallon, Nevada. She originally received a grant from the EPA to conduct this research in 2004,[9] and presented preliminary results the following year, in which she reported that the Fallon children have a metabolic predisposition to develop leukemia, though the cancer itself is caused by environmental contaminants.[10] She never published her final results, because she only had 20 blood samples--"not enough to reach a conclusive result."[11]

Autism

James is best known for her autism-related research. Regarding autism, James' view is that the transsulfuration pathway is disrupted in autistic children, resulting in these children being deficient in glutathione, as well as vitamins such as vitamin B6 and vitamin B12,[12] and that maternal glutathione deficiency may also be a risk factor for autism.[13] She has also found that administering these compounds as supplements, as well as methylcobalamin and folinic acid, to autistic children can significantly restore their levels of glutathione and cysteine and may therefore be useful in the treatment of autism.[14] [15] In addition, she has produced evidence that autistic children also suffer from impaired methylation capacity[16] and that, according to a study she presented at the 2005 Experimental Biology conference, they have a unique biological "fingerprint" in their blood which neurotypical children lack.[17] With regard to this particular study, James said that "One interpretation of this finding is that children with autism would be less able to detoxify and eliminate these heavy metals."[18] [19] According to the official blog of Autism Speaks, James found that autistic children exhibit abnormal folate metabolism that is detectable by higher levels of plasma homocysteine, adenosine, and S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine in the mothers of these children.[20] [21] Her glutathione-related research has been cited by anti-vaccinationists such as Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Dan Olmsted, and David Kirby as evidence that autistic children lack sufficient glutathione to remove mercury from their bodies and are therefore more susceptible to the toxicity of mercury in vaccines.[22] [23] However, James herself has cautioned against such conclusions, saying they are an overstatement of what her research actually shows; with specific regard to Kirby's claims, she said, "I'm afraid Mr. Kirby is overstating our conclusions -- which did not mention mercury. We simply showed for the first time that children with autism have lower levels of the major intracellular antioxidant, glutathione, which incidentally happens to be the major mechanism for mercury elimination from the body."[24] On March 27, 2012, the Jane Botsford Johnson Foundation awarded a $1.2 million research grant to Arkansas Children's Hospital to fund research into autism biomarkers; this research will be led by James. At the time the grant was being awarded, Johnson herself said that "Jill James' work at ACHRI holds great promise for the future of autism therapy and prevention."[25]

In vitro studies

Another field of her research that has attracted attention is a number of in vitro studies she has conducted regarding the toxicity of thimerosal to neuronal and glial cells; which, she has concluded, is mediated by glutathione.[26] She has said that these results "suggest that these children may have an increased vulnerability to pro-oxidant environmental exposures and a lower threshold for oxidative neurotoxicity and immunotoxicity."[27]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304204023/http://achri.archildrens.org/researchers/jamesj.htm S Jill James, PhD
  2. http://arbirthdefectsresearch.uams.edu/JamesJill.htm Research
  3. Web site: Treatment Advisory Board Biographies . . 19 October 2013.
  4. Web site: S. Jill James . Nofone.org.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20131022102749/http://cied.uark.edu/JillJamesBiosketch.pdf Jill James Biography
  6. Web site: S. Jill James . . https://web.archive.org/web/20150327053300/http://www.arpediatrics.org/index.php?option=com_uams&view=faculty&sap=00014170 . 27 March 2015 . 19 October 2013.
  7. Web site: Study Offers More Evidence of Role Folic Acid Plays Against Down Syndrome . . 29 September 1999 . 10 March 2014 . Associated Press.
  8. Book: Jepson, Bryan . Changing the Course of Autism: A Scientific Approach for Parents and Physicians . registration . . 2007 . 108. 9781591810612 .
  9. Web site: EPA gives grant to leukemia cluster study . . 18 June 2004 . 20 April 2014 . Associated Press.
  10. Web site: Research: Genetics, contaminants may have role in Fallon cluster . . 10 October 2009 . 5 April 2014 . Associated Press.
  11. Web site: Looking for Answers in a Town Known for Leukemia . . 5 April 2014 . 4 May 2014 . Crane-Murdoch, Sierra.
  12. http://www.autismcoach.com/Articles.asp?ID=252 Autism Coach Product Catalog and Information Website
  13. Web site: Potential breakthroughs in Autism research . . 28 May 2009 . 3 March 2014 . Dana, Joe.
  14. James . S. J. . Melnyk . S. . Fuchs . G. . Reid . T. . Jernigan . S. . Pavliv . O. . Hubanks . A. . Gaylor . D. W. . 10.3945/ajcn.2008.26615 . Efficacy of methylcobalamin and folinic acid treatment on glutathione redox status in children with autism . American Journal of Clinical Nutrition . 89 . 1 . 425–430 . 2008 . 19056591 . 2647708 .
  15. Book: Hope for the Autism Spectrum . . Kirchhoff, Sallie . 2008 . 185. 9781846428579 .
  16. Metabolic biomarkers of increased oxidative stress and impaired methylation capacity in children with autism . James, S. Jill . . December 2004 . 80 . 6 . 1611–1617. 10.1093/ajcn/80.6.1611 . 15585776 . free .
  17. Web site: Blood hints at autism's source . . 2005 . 19 October 2013 . Raloff, Janet.
  18. Web site: Study Links Free Radicals to the Spectrum of Autism . . 3 April 2005 . 19 October 2013 . Hotz, Robert Lee.
  19. Web site: Autism Linked with Low Levels of Antioxidants . . 13 April 2005 . 6 November 2013.
  20. http://www.autismspeaks.org/blog/2013/03/12/more-about-prenatal-folic-acid-and-autism More about Prenatal Folic Acid and Autism.
  21. James . S. J. . Melnyk . S. . Jernigan . S. . Pavliv . O. . Trusty . T. . Lehman . S. . Seidel . L. . Gaylor . D. W. . Cleves . M. A. . 10.1002/ajmg.b.31094 . A functional polymorphism in the reduced folate carrier gene and DNA hypomethylation in mothers of children with autism . American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B . 153B . 6 . 1209–1220 . 2010 . 20468076 . 2943349 .
  22. Web site: Autism, mercury and politics . . 1 July 2005 . 19 October 2013 . Kennedy, Robert F. Jr..
  23. Web site: Study sees possible autism-vaccine link . . 13 December 2004 . 22 April 2014 . Olmsted, Dan.
  24. Web site: Ped Med: Compelling clues to autism puzzle . . 3 November 2006 . 24 March 2014 . Wasowicz, Lidia.
  25. Web site: Jane Botsford Johnson Foundation donates to Arkansas Children's Hospital for autism research . THV 11 . 27 March 2012 . 6 November 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131214161056/http://www.thv11.com/news/article/204081/2/Foundation-donates-12-million-to-Arkansas-Childrens-Hospital . 14 December 2013 .
  26. James . S. J. . Slikker w . W. . Melnyk . S. . New . E. . Pogribna . M. . Jernigan . S. . 10.1016/j.neuro.2004.07.012 . Thimerosal Neurotoxicity is Associated with Glutathione Depletion: Protection with Glutathione Precursors . NeuroToxicology . 26 . 1 . 1–8 . 2005 . 15527868.
  27. Web site: New Thinking on Neurodevelopment . . 8 October 2007 . 19 October 2013.