Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, 92093, USA.
Center for Microbiome Innovation, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, 92093, USA.
BMC Microbiol. 2022 Mar 14;22(1):75. doi: 10.1186/s12866-022-02483-4.
Depression and obesity are highly prevalent, often co-occurring conditions marked by inflammation. Microbiome perturbations are implicated in obesity-inflammation-depression interrelationships, but how the microbiome mechanistically contributes to pathology remains unclear. Metabolomic investigations into microbial neuroactive metabolites may offer mechanistic insights into host-microbe interactions. Using 16S sequencing and untargeted mass spectrometry of saliva, and blood monocyte inflammation regulation assays, we identified key microbes, metabolites and host inflammation in association with depressive symptomatology, obesity, and depressive symptomatology-obesity comorbidity.
Gram-negative bacteria with inflammation potential were enriched relative to Gram-positive bacteria in comorbid obesity-depression, supporting the inflammation-oral microbiome link in obesity-depression interrelationships. Oral microbiome was more highly predictive of depressive symptomatology-obesity co-occurrences than of obesity or depressive symptomatology independently, suggesting specific microbial signatures associated with obesity-depression co-occurrences. Mass spectrometry analysis revealed significant changes in levels of signaling molecules of microbiota, microbial or dietary derived signaling peptides and aromatic amino acids among depressive symptomatology, obesity and comorbid obesity-depression. Furthermore, integration of the microbiome and metabolomics data revealed that key oral microbes, many previously shown to have neuroactive potential, co-occurred with potential neuropeptides and biosynthetic precursors of the neurotransmitters dopamine, epinephrine and serotonin.
Together, our findings offer novel insights into oral microbial-brain connection and potential neuroactive metabolites involved.
抑郁和肥胖是高度普遍的、常同时发生的疾病,其特征是炎症。微生物组的紊乱与肥胖-炎症-抑郁的相互关系有关,但微生物组如何在病理学上发挥作用仍不清楚。对微生物神经活性代谢物的代谢组学研究可能为宿主-微生物相互作用提供机制上的见解。我们使用 16S 测序和唾液的非靶向质谱分析,以及血液单核细胞炎症调节测定,鉴定了与抑郁症状、肥胖和抑郁症状-肥胖共病相关的关键微生物、代谢物和宿主炎症。
在肥胖-抑郁共病中,具有炎症潜力的革兰氏阴性菌相对于革兰氏阳性菌更为丰富,支持了肥胖-抑郁相互关系中炎症-口腔微生物组的联系。口腔微生物组对抑郁症状-肥胖共病的预测性高于对肥胖或抑郁症状的单独预测性,这表明与肥胖-抑郁共病相关的特定微生物特征。质谱分析显示,在抑郁症状、肥胖和肥胖-抑郁共病中,微生物群和微生物或膳食衍生的信号肽和芳香族氨基酸的信号分子水平发生了显著变化。此外,微生物组和代谢组学数据的整合表明,许多先前具有神经活性潜力的关键口腔微生物与潜在的神经肽以及多巴胺、肾上腺素和血清素等神经递质的生物合成前体共同出现。
总的来说,我们的研究结果提供了关于口腔微生物-大脑连接和潜在神经活性代谢物的新见解。