Xie Xiaoxian, Li Wenwen, Xiong Ze, Xu Junyu, Liao Tailin, Sun Lei, Xu Haoshen, Zhang Mengya, Zhou Jiafeng, Xiong Wenzheng, Fu Zhengwei, Li Zezhi, Han Qi, Cui Donghong, Anthony Daniel C
Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, School of Medicine, Shanghai 201109, PR China; Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford, Mansfield Road, OX1 3QT Oxford, UK; College of Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310032, PR China.
Affiliated Mental Health Center and Hangzhou Seventh People's Hospital, School of Brain Science and Brain Medicine, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou 310058, PR China.
Brain Behav Immun. 2025 Jan;123:442-455. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2024.09.014. Epub 2024 Sep 18.
As an adjunct therapy, metformin enhances the efficacy of conventional antidepressant medications. However, its mode of action remains unclear. Here, metformin was found to ameliorate depression-like behaviors in mice exposed to chronic restraint stress (CRS) by normalizing the dysbiotic gut microbiome. Fecal transplants from metformin-treated mice ameliorated depressive behaviors in stressed mice. Microbiome profiling revealed that Akkermansia muciniphila (A. muciniphila), in particular, was markedly increased in the gut by metformin and that oral administration of this species alone was sufficient to reverse CRS-induced depressive behaviors and normalize aberrant stress-induced 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) metabolism in the brain and gut. Untargeted metabolomic profiling further identified the bile acid metabolites taurocholate and deoxycholic acid as direct A. muciniphila-derived molecules that are, individually, sufficient to rescue the CRS-induced impaired 5-HT metabolism and depression-like behaviors. Thus, we report metformin reprograms 5-HT metabolism via microbiome-brain interactions to mitigate depressive syndromes, providing novel insights into gut microbiota-derived bile acids as potential therapeutic candidates for depressive mood disorders from bench to bedside.
作为一种辅助疗法,二甲双胍可增强传统抗抑郁药物的疗效。然而,其作用方式尚不清楚。在此研究中,发现二甲双胍可通过使肠道微生物群失调正常化,改善遭受慢性束缚应激(CRS)的小鼠的抑郁样行为。来自接受二甲双胍治疗小鼠的粪便移植改善了应激小鼠的抑郁行为。微生物群分析显示,特别是嗜黏蛋白阿克曼氏菌(A. muciniphila)在肠道中因二甲双胍而显著增加,单独口服该菌种足以逆转CRS诱导的抑郁行为,并使大脑和肠道中异常的应激诱导5-羟色胺(5-HT)代谢正常化。非靶向代谢组学分析进一步确定胆汁酸代谢物牛磺胆酸盐和脱氧胆酸是直接源自A. muciniphila的分子,它们各自足以挽救CRS诱导的5-HT代谢受损和抑郁样行为。因此,我们报告二甲双胍通过微生物群-脑相互作用重新编程5-HT代谢以减轻抑郁综合征,为肠道微生物群衍生的胆汁酸作为抑郁情绪障碍从实验室到临床的潜在治疗候选物提供了新的见解。