Autism Spectrum Disorder Research Open access Peer reviewed

Linking Brain Morphometry to Psychometric Measures and Energy‐Metabolic Biomarkers in Adults With Autism Spectrum Disorder

Eleonora Esposto, Kathrin Nickel, Dominique Endres, Kimon Runge and 7 more

Autism Research | Jun 5, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

ABSTRACT Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is associated with differences in neurodevelopment and altered metabolism, yet the interplay between brain morphometry, mitochondrial and energy metabolism biomarkers, and autistic traits in adults remains poorly understood. This study investigates the link between brain structure, psychometric measures, and both central and peripheral metabolic biomarkers in adults with ASD. We studied 145 adults, including 74 with ASD and 71 control participants (CON) using high‐resolution 3‐Tesla MRI to assess cortical thickness, subcortical and global brain volumes. Central energy metabolism was indexed by the posterior‐cingulate lactate + threonine (Lac + ) peak quantified with proton‐MRS. We examined associations between biomarkers of mitochondrial function and energy metabolism (including lactate, pyruvate, creatine kinase, and multiple acylcarnitines). Psychometric evaluations included measures of ASD and attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptom severity, as well as other psychiatric comorbidities. Between‐group differences and correlations were assessed using robust statistics, controlling for age, sex, image quality, and total intracranial volume. Adults with ASD showed significantly larger bilateral caudate volumes compared to CON. Within the ASD group, higher ADHD symptom severity in childhood correlated with reduced cortical thickness in multiple frontal and temporal regions. Among metabolic markers, acylcarnitine C5:1 was positively associated with right insular cortex thickness, while C18:1‐OH and C18:2 levels correlated positively with caudate volume. Caudate nucleus volume is associated not only with an ASD diagnosis but also with specific peripheral energy‐metabolism blood markers, such as specific acylcarnitines. Alterations in cortical thickness were also correlated with acylcarnitine levels and, to a greater extent, with co‐occurring ADHD symptoms. While alterations in cortical thickness and basal ganglia structure have been previously described in ASD and comorbid ADHD, the linkage between mitochondrial and energy metabolism biomarkers with neuroanatomical alterations in ASD is, to our knowledge, a novel observation that warrants further investigation.

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Authors

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Eleonora Esposto

first | University of Rome Tor Vergata

Kathrin Nickel

middle | University of Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0001-9863-317X

Dominique Endres

middle | University of Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0001-7322-1195

Kimon Runge

middle | University of Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0002-0263-4360

Katharina Domschke

middle | University of Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0002-2550-9132

Thomas Lange

middle | University Medical Center Freiburg

Marco Reisert

middle | University of Freiburg

Anke Schumann

middle | University Medical Center Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0002-7958-0188

Cinzia Niolu

middle | University of Rome Tor Vergata | ORCID 0000-0001-6173-2684

Ludger Tebartz van Elst

middle | University of Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0002-2274-5447

Simon Maier

last | University of Freiburg | ORCID 0000-0002-7326-7422

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Citation

BibTeX

@article{Esposto2026Linking,
  title = {Linking Brain Morphometry to Psychometric Measures and Energy‐Metabolic Biomarkers in Adults With Autism Spectrum Disorder},
  author = {Eleonora Esposto and Kathrin Nickel and Dominique Endres and Kimon Runge and Katharina Domschke and Thomas Lange and Marco Reisert and Anke Schumann and Cinzia Niolu and Ludger Tebartz van Elst and Simon Maier},
  journal = {Autism Research},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1002/aur.70288},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.70288}
}

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