Parker Aimée, James Steve A, Purse Catherine, Brion Arlaine, Goldson Andrew, Telatin Andrea, Baker David, Carding Simon R
Gut Microbes and Health Research Programme, Quadram Institute, Norwich, United Kingdom.
Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2022 Jul 18;14:828429. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.828429. eCollection 2022.
Age-associated changes in the structure of the intestinal microbiome and in its interaction with the brain via the gut-brain axis are increasingly being implicated in neurological and neurodegenerative diseases. Intestinal microbial dysbiosis and translocation of microbes and microbial products including fungal species into the brain have been implicated in the development of dementias such as Alzheimer's disease. Using germ-free mice, we investigated if the fungal gut commensal, , an opportunistic pathogen in humans, can traverse the gastrointestinal barrier and disseminate to brain tissue and whether ageing impacts on the gut mycobiome as a pre-disposing factor in fungal brain infection. was detected in different regions of the brain of colonised germ-free mice in both yeast and hyphal cell forms, often in close association with activated (Iba-1) microglial cells. Using high-throughput ITS1 amplicon sequencing to characterise the faecal gut fungal composition of aged and young SPF mice, we identified several putative gut commensal fungal species with pathobiont potential although their abundance was not significantly different between young and aged mice. Collectively, these results suggest that although some fungal species can travel from the gut to brain where they can induce an inflammatory response, ageing alone is not correlated with significant changes in gut mycobiota composition which could predispose to these events. These results are consistent with a scenario in which significant disruptions to the gut microbiota or intestinal barrier, beyond those which occur with natural ageing, are required to allow fungal escape and brain infection.
肠道微生物群结构的年龄相关变化及其通过肠-脑轴与大脑的相互作用越来越多地被认为与神经和神经退行性疾病有关。肠道微生物失调以及微生物和微生物产物(包括真菌物种)向大脑的转移已被认为与诸如阿尔茨海默病等痴呆症的发展有关。我们使用无菌小鼠研究了人类机会性病原体——肠道共生真菌是否能够穿过胃肠道屏障并扩散到脑组织,以及衰老是否作为真菌性脑部感染的一个 predisposing 因素影响肠道真菌群。在定殖的无菌小鼠大脑的不同区域检测到了酵母和菌丝细胞形式的,其通常与活化的(Iba-1)小胶质细胞密切相关。我们使用高通量 ITS1 扩增子测序来表征老年和年轻 SPF 小鼠的粪便肠道真菌组成,我们鉴定出了几种具有潜在致病共生潜力的假定肠道共生真菌物种,尽管它们在年轻和老年小鼠之间的丰度没有显著差异。总体而言,这些结果表明,虽然一些真菌物种可以从肠道传播到大脑并在那里引发炎症反应,但仅衰老与肠道真菌群组成的显著变化无关,而肠道真菌群组成的显著变化可能导致这些情况的发生。这些结果与一种情况一致,即除了自然衰老过程中发生的那些破坏之外,还需要对肠道微生物群或肠道屏障进行重大破坏,才能使真菌逃逸和脑部感染。 (注:原文中“predisposing factor”未准确翻译,这里保留英文以便理解其在医学语境中的含义;“”原文此处有缺失信息,未完整翻译)