The Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Department of Neurology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Neuroscience Initiative, CUNY Advanced Science Research Center, New York, NY, 10031, USA.
Neurotherapeutics. 2018 Jan;15(1):31-35. doi: 10.1007/s13311-017-0597-9.
Environmental and dietary stimuli have always been implicated in brain development and behavioral responses. The gut, being the major portal of communication with the external environment, has recently been brought to the forefront of this interaction with the establishment of a gut-brain axis in health and disease. Moreover, recent breakthroughs in germ-free and antibiotic-treated mice have demonstrated the significant impact of the microbiome in modulating behavioral responses in mice and have established a more specific microbiome-gut-behavior axis. One of the mechanisms by which this axis affects social behavior is by regulating myelination at the prefrontal cortex, an important site for complex cognitive behavior planning and decision-making. The prefrontal cortex exhibits late myelination of its axonal projections that could extend into the third decade of life in humans, which make it susceptible to external influences, such as microbial metabolites. Changes in the gut microbiome were shown to alter the composition of the microbial metabolome affecting highly permeable bioactive compounds, such as p-cresol, which could impair oligodendrocyte differentiation. Dysregulated myelination in the prefrontal cortex is then able to affect behavioral responses in mice, shifting them towards social isolation. The reduced social interactions could then limit microbial exchange, which could otherwise pose a threat to the survival of the existing microbial community in the host and, thus, provide an evolutionary advantage to the specific microbial community. In this review, we will analyze the microbiome-gut-behavior axis, describe the interactions between the gut microbiome and oligodendrocytes and highlight their role in the modulation of social behavior.
环境和饮食刺激因素一直与大脑发育和行为反应有关。肠道作为与外部环境主要交流门户,在健康和疾病中与大脑建立了“肠-脑轴”,最近成为这种相互作用的研究焦点。此外,无菌和抗生素处理小鼠的最新突破表明,微生物组在调节小鼠行为反应方面具有重要影响,并建立了更为具体的微生物组-肠道-行为轴。该轴影响社会行为的机制之一是通过调节前额叶皮层的髓鞘形成,前额叶皮层是复杂认知行为计划和决策的重要部位。前额叶皮层的轴突投射具有晚期髓鞘形成的特点,在人类中可能会延伸到第三个十年,这使得它容易受到外部影响,如微生物代谢物的影响。肠道微生物组的变化被证明会改变微生物代谢组的组成,影响高度可渗透的生物活性化合物,如对甲酚,这可能会损害少突胶质细胞的分化。然后,前额叶皮层的髓鞘形成失调能够影响小鼠的行为反应,使它们变得更加孤立。减少的社会互动可能会限制微生物的交换,否则这会对宿主中现有微生物群落的生存构成威胁,从而为特定的微生物群落提供进化优势。在这篇综述中,我们将分析微生物组-肠道-行为轴,描述肠道微生物组与少突胶质细胞之间的相互作用,并强调它们在调节社会行为中的作用。