Cawthon Carolina R, de La Serre Claire B
Department of Foods and Nutrition, University of Georgia, 372 Dawson Hall, 305 Sanford Drive, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
Brain Res. 2018 Aug 15;1693(Pt B):134-139. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2018.01.012. Epub 2018 Jan 31.
Contemporary techniques including the use of germ-free models and next generation sequencing have deepened our understanding of the gut microbiota dynamics and its influence on host physiology. There is accumulating evidence that the gut microbiota can communicate to the CNS and is involved in the development of metabolic and behavioral disorders. Vagal afferent terminals are positioned beneath the gut epithelium where they can receive, directly or indirectly, signals produced by the gut microbiota, to affect host behavior, including feeding behavior. Supplementation with L. Rhamnosus in mice notably causes a decrease in anxiety and these effects are abolished by vagotomy. Additionally, chronic treatment with bacterial byproduct lipopolysaccharide (LPS) blunts vagally-mediated post-ingestive feedback and is associated with increased food intake. Inflammation in the nodose ganglion (NG), the location of vagal afferent neurons' cell bodies, may be a key triggering factor of microbiota-driven vagal alteration. Interestingly, several models show that vagal damage leads to an increase in immune cell (microglia) activation in the NG and remodeling of the vagal pathway. Similarly, diet-driven microbiota dysbiosis is associated with NG microglia activation and decreased vagal outputs to the CNS. Crucially, preventing dysbiosis and microglia activation in high-fat diet fed rodents normalizes vagal innervation and energy intake, highlighting the importance of microbiota/vagal communication in controlling feeding behavior. As of today, new consideration of potential roles for glial influence on vagal communication and new methods of vagal afferent ablation open opportunities to increase our understanding of how the gut microbiota influence its host's health and behavior.
当代技术,包括使用无菌模型和下一代测序技术,加深了我们对肠道微生物群动态及其对宿主生理影响的理解。越来越多的证据表明,肠道微生物群可以与中枢神经系统进行交流,并参与代谢和行为障碍的发展。迷走神经传入终末位于肠道上皮下方,在那里它们可以直接或间接地接收肠道微生物群产生的信号,从而影响宿主行为,包括进食行为。给小鼠补充鼠李糖乳杆菌显著降低了焦虑,而这些作用在迷走神经切断术后消失。此外,长期用细菌副产物脂多糖(LPS)治疗会减弱迷走神经介导的餐后反馈,并与食物摄入量增加有关。迷走神经传入神经元细胞体所在的结状神经节(NG)中的炎症可能是微生物群驱动的迷走神经改变的关键触发因素。有趣的是,几个模型表明,迷走神经损伤会导致NG中免疫细胞(小胶质细胞)激活增加以及迷走神经通路重塑。同样,饮食驱动的微生物群失调与NG小胶质细胞激活以及向中枢神经系统的迷走神经输出减少有关。至关重要的是,在高脂饮食喂养的啮齿动物中预防失调和小胶质细胞激活可使迷走神经支配和能量摄入正常化,突出了微生物群/迷走神经交流在控制进食行为中的重要性。截至目前,对神经胶质对迷走神经交流潜在作用的新思考以及迷走神经传入消融的新方法为增进我们对肠道微生物群如何影响宿主健康和行为的理解提供了机会。