Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2020 May;25(5):1068-1079. doi: 10.1038/s41380-019-0380-x. Epub 2019 Mar 4.
Chronic exposure to stress is associated with increased incidence of depression, generalized anxiety, and PTSD. However, stress induces vulnerability to such disorders only in a sub-population of individuals, as others remain resilient. Inflammation has emerged as a putative mechanism for promoting stress vulnerability. Using a rodent model of social defeat, we have previously shown that rats with short-defeat latencies (SL/vulnerable rats) show increased anxiety- and depression-like behaviors, and these behaviors are mediated by inflammation in the ventral hippocampus. The other half of socially defeated rats show long-latencies to defeat (LL/resilient) and are similar to controls. Because gut microbiota are important activators of inflammatory substances, we assessed the role of the gut microbiome in mediating vulnerability to repeated social defeat stress. We analyzed the fecal microbiome of control, SL/vulnerable, and LL/resilient rats using shotgun metagenome sequencing and observed increased expression of immune-modulating microbiota, such as Clostridia, in SL/vulnerable rats. We then tested the importance of gut microbiota to the SL/vulnerable phenotype. In otherwise naive rats treated with microbiota from SL/vulnerable rats, there was higher microglial density and IL-1β expression in the vHPC, and higher depression-like behaviors relative to rats that received microbiota from LL/resilient rats, non-stressed control rats, or vehicle-treated rats. However, anxiety-like behavior during social interaction was not altered by transplant of the microbiome of SL/vulnerable rats into non-stressed rats. Taken together, the results suggest the gut microbiome contributes to the depression-like behavior and inflammatory processes in the vHPC of stress vulnerable individuals.
慢性应激与抑郁、广泛性焦虑和 PTSD 的发生率增加有关。然而,压力只会使一部分人易患这些疾病,而其他人则有抵抗力。炎症已成为促进压力易感性的一种推测机制。我们之前使用社交挫败的啮齿动物模型表明,潜伏期短的挫败大鼠(SL/易损大鼠)表现出焦虑和抑郁样行为,这些行为是由腹侧海马体的炎症介导的。另一半被社交挫败的大鼠表现出长潜伏期的挫败(LL/有弹性的),与对照组相似。由于肠道微生物群是炎症物质的重要激活物,我们评估了肠道微生物群在介导反复社交挫败应激易感性中的作用。我们使用 shotgun 宏基因组测序分析了对照、SL/易损和 LL/有弹性大鼠的粪便微生物群,并观察到 SL/易损大鼠中免疫调节微生物群(如梭菌)的表达增加。然后,我们测试了肠道微生物群对 SL/易损表型的重要性。在其他未受处理的大鼠中,用来自 SL/易损大鼠的微生物群处理后,vHPC 中的小胶质细胞密度和 IL-1β 表达增加,并且与接受来自 LL/有弹性大鼠、未受压力的对照大鼠或载体处理的大鼠的微生物群的大鼠相比,表现出更高的抑郁样行为。然而,社交互动期间的焦虑样行为并没有因将 SL/易损大鼠的微生物群移植到未受压力的大鼠中而改变。总之,这些结果表明肠道微生物群有助于压力易感性个体的 vHPC 中抑郁样行为和炎症过程。