Department of Laboratory Medicine, Zhu Jiang Hospital, Southern Medical University, 510282, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China.
Jiangmen Central Hospital, Affiliated Jiangmen Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, 529000, Jangmen, Guangdong, China.
Nutr Diabetes. 2020 Apr 22;10(1):12. doi: 10.1038/s41387-020-0115-8.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a global health problem without effective methods to alleviate the disease progression. Amyloid β-protein (Aβ) is widely accepted as a key biomarker for AD. Metabolic syndromes, including obesity and insulin resistance, are key high risk factors for AD. Akkermansia muciniphila (Akk), the only representative human gut microbe in the genus Verrucomicrobia, can prevent the weight gain caused by a high-fat diet, repair the damaged integrity of the intestinal epithelium barrier, reduce endotoxin levels in blood and improve insulin resistance. The aim of this study is to explore the impact of Akk administration in AD model mice in different diets.
APP/PS1 mice were fed either a normal chow diet or a high-fat diet and were treated with Akk by gavage each day for 6 months. The impacts of Akk on glucose metabolism, intestinal barrier and lipid metabolism in the mouse model of AD were determined. Changes in brain pathology and neuroethology were also analyzed.
Akk effectively reduced the fasting blood glucose and serum diamine oxidase levels, and alleviated the reduction of colonic mucus cells in APP/PS1 mice. After treatment with Akk, the APP/PS1 mice showed obviously reduced blood lipid levels, improved hepatic steatosis and scapular brown fat whitening. Moreover, Akk promoted the reduction of Aβ 40-42 levels in the cerebral cortex of APP/PS1 mice, shortened the study time and improved the completion rate in Y-maze tests.
Akk effectively improved glucose tolerance, intestine barrier dysfunction and dyslipidemia in AD model mice. Our study results suggested that Akk could delay the pathological changes in the brain and relieve impairment of spatial learning and memory in AD model mice, which provides a new strategy for prevention and treatment of AD.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一个全球性的健康问题,目前尚无有效的方法来缓解疾病的进展。淀粉样β-蛋白(Aβ)被广泛认为是 AD 的关键生物标志物。代谢综合征,包括肥胖和胰岛素抵抗,是 AD 的关键高危因素。阿克曼氏菌(Akk)是厚壁菌门疣微菌科中唯一的代表人类肠道微生物,可预防高脂肪饮食引起的体重增加,修复受损的肠上皮屏障完整性,降低血液内毒素水平,并改善胰岛素抵抗。本研究旨在探索 Akk 在不同饮食的 AD 模型小鼠中的作用。
APP/PS1 小鼠分别喂食正常饲料或高脂肪饲料,并每天通过灌胃给予 Akk 治疗 6 个月。确定 Akk 对 AD 模型小鼠葡萄糖代谢、肠道屏障和脂代谢的影响。还分析了大脑病理和神经行为学的变化。
Akk 有效降低了 APP/PS1 小鼠的空腹血糖和血清二胺氧化酶水平,并缓解了 APP/PS1 小鼠结肠黏液细胞减少。用 Akk 治疗后,APP/PS1 小鼠的血脂水平明显降低,肝脂肪变性和肩胛棕色脂肪白化得到改善。此外,Akk 促进了 APP/PS1 小鼠大脑皮质中 Aβ40-42 水平的降低,缩短了 Y 迷宫测试中的学习时间并提高了完成率。
Akk 有效改善了 AD 模型小鼠的葡萄糖耐量、肠道屏障功能障碍和血脂异常。我们的研究结果表明,Akk 可延缓 AD 模型小鼠大脑的病理变化,并缓解其空间学习和记忆损伤,为 AD 的预防和治疗提供了新策略。