Partrick Katherine A, Chassaing Benoit, Beach Linda Q, McCann Katharine E, Gewirtz Andrew T, Huhman Kim L
Neuroscience Institute, Georgia State University, GA, 30303, USA.
Neuroscience Institute, Georgia State University, GA, 30303, USA; Center for Inflammation, Immunity & Infection, Institute for Biomedical Sciences, Georgia State University, GA, 30303, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2018 Aug 1;348:277. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2018.03.044. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Social stress can promote a variety of neuropsychiatric illnesses, many of which have a high co-morbidity with gastrointestinal disorders. Recent data indicate that gastrointestinal microbiota can affect their host's brain and behavior. Syrian hamsters are ideal subjects for social stress research because they are territorial, aggressive, and rapidly form dominant/subordinate relationships. The purpose of this study was to determine if exposure to social stress in hamsters alters gut microbiota in dominants and subordinates after an agonistic encounter and if pre-stress gut microbiota composition is correlated with the outcome of such a conflict. Microbiota composition was assessed via 16S mRNA Illumina sequencing on fecal samples. One agonistic encounter caused a decrease in alpha diversity in both dominant and subordinate animals with a more pronounced decrease after repeated encounters. PERMANOVA analysis of the unweighted unifrac distance revealed a distinct change in beta diversity after one and nine encounters in both dominants and subordinates. Linear discriminant analysis (LEfSE) showed bacteria from the order Lactobacillales were significantly reduced following social stress in both dominants and subordinates, and both groups exhibited increases in phyla Bacteroidetes and decreases in phyla Firmicutes following repeated encounters. LEfSE analysis on samples collected prior to social interaction revealed that some microbial taxa were correlated with a hamster achieving dominant or subordinate status. These data suggest that even an acute exposure to social stress can impact gastrointestinal microbiota and that the state of the microbial community before social stress may predict dominant/subordinate status following a subsequent agonistic encounter.
社会压力可引发多种神经精神疾病,其中许多与胃肠功能紊乱高度共病。近期数据表明,胃肠道微生物群可影响宿主的大脑和行为。叙利亚仓鼠是社会压力研究的理想对象,因为它们具有领地意识、攻击性强,且能迅速形成主导/从属关系。本研究的目的是确定仓鼠在发生争斗性遭遇后,暴露于社会压力是否会改变主导者和从属者的肠道微生物群,以及应激前的肠道微生物群组成是否与这种冲突的结果相关。通过对粪便样本进行16S mRNA Illumina测序来评估微生物群组成。一次争斗性遭遇导致主导和从属动物的α多样性均降低,重复遭遇后降低更为明显。对未加权的非加权 UniFrac 距离进行的PERMANOVA分析显示,主导者和从属者在一次和九次遭遇后,β多样性均有明显变化。线性判别分析(LEfSE)表明,在社会压力后,主导者和从属者中乳酸杆菌目的细菌均显著减少,并且在重复遭遇后,两组的拟杆菌门均增加,厚壁菌门均减少。对社交互动前收集的样本进行的LEfSE分析表明,一些微生物分类群与仓鼠获得主导或从属地位相关。这些数据表明,即使是急性暴露于社会压力也会影响胃肠道微生物群,并且社会压力前的微生物群落状态可能预测随后争斗性遭遇后的主导/从属地位。