Center for Neuroscience and Cell Biology, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Centre for Innovative Biomedicine and Biotechnology, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Mol Neurodegener. 2024 Oct 24;19(1):78. doi: 10.1186/s13024-024-00766-0.
In Parkinson's patients, intestinal dysbiosis can occur years before clinical diagnosis, implicating the gut and its microbiota in the disease. Recent evidence suggests the gut microbiota may trigger body-first Parkinson Disease (PD), yet the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to elucidate how a dysbiotic microbiome through intestinal immune alterations triggers PD-related neurodegeneration.
To determine the impact of gut dysbiosis on the development and progression of PD pathology, wild-type male C57BL/6 mice were transplanted with fecal material from PD patients and age-matched healthy donors to challenge the gut-immune-brain axis.
This study demonstrates that patient-derived intestinal microbiota caused midbrain tyrosine hydroxylase positive (TH +) cell loss and motor dysfunction. Ileum-associated microbiota remodeling correlates with a decrease in Th17 homeostatic cells. This event led to an increase in gut inflammation and intestinal barrier disruption. In this regard, we found a decrease in CD4 + cells and an increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines in the blood of PD transplanted mice that could contribute to an increase in the permeabilization of the blood-brain-barrier, observed by an increase in mesencephalic Ig-G-positive microvascular leaks and by an increase of mesencephalic IL-17 levels, compatible with systemic inflammation. Furthermore, alpha-synuclein aggregates can spread caudo-rostrally, causing fragmentation of neuronal mitochondria. This mitochondrial damage subsequently activates innate immune responses in neurons and triggers microglial activation.
We propose that the dysbiotic gut microbiome (dysbiome) in PD can disrupt a healthy microbiome and Th17 homeostatic immunity in the ileum mucosa, leading to a cascade effect that propagates to the brain, ultimately contributing to PD pathophysiology. Our landmark study has successfully identified new peripheral biomarkers that could be used to develop highly effective strategies to prevent the progression of PD into the brain.
在帕金森病患者中,肠道菌群失调可能在临床诊断前数年发生,这表明肠道及其微生物群与该疾病有关。最近的证据表明,肠道微生物群可能引发身体首先发生的帕金森病(PD),但其潜在机制尚不清楚。本研究旨在阐明失调的微生物组如何通过肠道免疫改变引发与 PD 相关的神经退行性变。
为了确定肠道菌群失调对 PD 病理发展和进展的影响,将 PD 患者和年龄匹配的健康供体的粪便物质移植到野生型雄性 C57BL/6 小鼠中,以挑战肠道-免疫-脑轴。
本研究表明,患者来源的肠道微生物群导致中脑酪氨酸羟化酶阳性(TH+)细胞丢失和运动功能障碍。回肠相关微生物群重塑与 Th17 稳态细胞减少相关。这一事件导致肠道炎症和肠道屏障破坏增加。在这方面,我们发现 PD 移植小鼠的血液中 CD4+细胞减少和促炎细胞因子增加,这可能导致血脑屏障通透性增加,通过中脑 Ig-G 阳性微血管渗漏增加和中脑 IL-17 水平增加来观察到,这与全身炎症相符。此外,α-突触核蛋白聚集体可以向头侧扩散,导致神经元线粒体碎片化。这种线粒体损伤随后激活神经元中的固有免疫反应,并触发小胶质细胞激活。
我们提出,PD 中的失调肠道微生物组(dysbiome)可以破坏健康的微生物组和回肠黏膜中的 Th17 稳态免疫,引发级联效应,传播到大脑,最终导致 PD 病理生理学。我们的里程碑式研究成功确定了新的外周生物标志物,这些标志物可用于开发预防 PD 向大脑进展的高度有效的策略。