Bharwani Aadil, Mian M Firoz, Surette Michael G, Bienenstock John, Forsythe Paul
Department of Pathology & Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
McMaster Brain-Body Institute, The Research Institute of St. Joseph's Hamilton, Hamilton, Canada.
BMC Med. 2017 Jan 11;15(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s12916-016-0771-7.
Stress-related disorders involve systemic alterations, including disruption of the intestinal microbial community. Given the putative connections between the microbiota, immunity, neural function, and behaviour, we investigated the potential for microbe-induced gut-to-brain signalling to modulate the impact of stress on host behaviour and immunoregulation.
Male C57BL/6 mice treated orally over 28 days with either Lactobacillus rhamnosus (JB-1) ™ or vehicle were subjected to chronic social defeat and assessed for alterations in behaviour and immune cell phenotype. 16S rRNA sequencing and mass spectrometry were employed to analyse the faecal microbial community and metabolite profile.
Treatment with JB-1 decreased stress-induced anxiety-like behaviour and prevented deficits in social interaction with conspecifics. However, JB-1 did not alter development of aggressor avoidance following social defeat. Microbial treatment attenuated stress-related activation of dendritic cells while increasing IL-10+ regulatory T cells. Furthermore, JB-1 modulated the effect of stress on faecal metabolites with neuroactive and immunomodulatory properties. Exposure to social defeat altered faecal microbial community composition and reduced species richness and diversity, none of which was prevented by JB-1. Stress-related microbiota disruptions persisted in vehicle-treated mice for 3 weeks following stressor cessation.
These data demonstrate that despite the complexity of the gut microbiota, exposure to a single microbial strain can protect against certain stress-induced behaviours and systemic immune alterations without preventing dysbiosis. This work supports microbe-based interventions for stress-related disorders.
应激相关障碍涉及全身改变,包括肠道微生物群落的破坏。鉴于微生物群、免疫、神经功能和行为之间的假定联系,我们研究了微生物诱导的肠-脑信号传导调节应激对宿主行为和免疫调节影响的可能性。
将雄性C57BL/6小鼠连续28天口服鼠李糖乳杆菌(JB-1)™或赋形剂,使其遭受慢性社会挫败,并评估其行为和免疫细胞表型的变化。采用16S rRNA测序和质谱分析粪便微生物群落和代谢物谱。
用JB-1治疗可减少应激诱导的焦虑样行为,并防止与同种个体社交互动的缺陷。然而,JB-1并未改变社会挫败后对攻击者回避行为的发展。微生物治疗减弱了树突状细胞的应激相关激活,同时增加了IL-10+调节性T细胞。此外,JB-1调节了应激对具有神经活性和免疫调节特性的粪便代谢物的影响。暴露于社会挫败会改变粪便微生物群落组成,降低物种丰富度和多样性,而JB-1均无法预防这些变化。在应激源停止后,赋形剂处理的小鼠中与应激相关的微生物群破坏持续了3周。
这些数据表明,尽管肠道微生物群很复杂,但暴露于单一微生物菌株可以预防某些应激诱导的行为和全身免疫改变,而不会阻止生态失调。这项工作支持基于微生物的应激相关障碍干预措施。