Hung Lin Y, Alves Nuno D, Del Colle Andrew, Talati Ardesheer, Najjar Sarah A, Bouchard Virginie, Gillet Virginie, Tong Yan, Huang Zixing, Browning Kirsteen N, Hua Jialiang, Liu Ying, Woodruff James O, Juarez Daniel, Medina Melissa, Posner Jonathan, Tonello Raquel, Yalcinkaya Nazli, Israelyan Narek, Ringel Roey, Yang Letao, Leong Kam W, Yang Mu, Sze Ji Ying, Savidge Tor, Gingrich Jay, Shulman Robert J, Gershon Michael D, Ouellet Annie, Takser Larissa, Ansorge Mark S, Margolis Kara Gross
NYU Pain Research Center, Department of Molecular Pathobiology, College of Dentistry, New York University, New York, New York.
Department of Psychiatry, Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York; New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York.
Gastroenterology. 2025 Apr;168(4):754-768. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2024.11.012. Epub 2024 Dec 11.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Mood disorders and disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBI) are highly prevalent, commonly comorbid, and lack fully effective therapies. Although selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are first-line pharmacological treatments for these disorders, they may impart adverse effects, including anxiety, anhedonia, dysmotility, and, in children exposed in utero, an increased risk of cognitive, mood, and gastrointestinal disorders. SSRIs act systemically to block the serotonin reuptake transporter and enhance serotonergic signaling in the brain, intestinal epithelium, and enteric neurons. Yet, the compartments that mediate the therapeutic and adverse effects of SSRIs are unknown, as is whether gestational SSRI exposure directly contributes to human DGBI development.
We used transgenic, surgical, and pharmacological approaches to study the effects of intestinal epithelial serotonin reuptake transporter or serotonin on mood and gastrointestinal function, as well as relevant communication pathways. We also conducted a prospective birth cohort study to assess effects of gestational SSRI exposure on DGBI development.
Serotonin reuptake transporter ablation targeted to the intestinal epithelium promoted anxiolytic and antidepressive-like effects without causing adverse effects on the gastrointestinal tract or brain; conversely, epithelial serotonin synthesis inhibition increased anxiety and depression-like behaviors. Afferent vagal pathways were found to be conduits by which intestinal epithelial serotonin affects behavior. In utero SSRI exposure is a significant and specific risk factor for development of the DGBI, functional constipation, in the first year of life, irrespective of maternal depressive symptoms.
These findings provide fundamental insights into how the gastrointestinal tract modulates emotional behaviors, reveal a novel gut-targeted therapeutic approach for mood modulation, and suggest a new link in humans between in utero SSRI exposure and DGBI development.
情绪障碍和肠-脑互动障碍(DGBI)极为常见,常合并出现,且缺乏完全有效的治疗方法。尽管选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)是这些疾病的一线药物治疗,但它们可能会产生不良反应,包括焦虑、快感缺失、运动障碍,以及对于子宫内暴露的儿童,认知、情绪和胃肠道疾病风险增加。SSRI通过全身作用来阻断5-羟色胺再摄取转运体,并增强大脑、肠上皮和肠神经元中的5-羟色胺能信号传导。然而,介导SSRI治疗和不良反应的部位尚不清楚,子宫内暴露于SSRI是否直接导致人类DGBI的发生也不清楚。
我们使用转基因、手术和药理学方法来研究肠上皮5-羟色胺再摄取转运体或5-羟色胺对情绪和胃肠功能以及相关通讯通路的影响。我们还进行了一项前瞻性出生队列研究,以评估子宫内暴露于SSRI对DGBI发生的影响。
靶向肠上皮的5-羟色胺再摄取转运体消融促进了抗焦虑和抗抑郁样作用,而不会对胃肠道或大脑产生不良反应;相反,上皮5-羟色胺合成抑制增加了焦虑和抑郁样行为。发现传入迷走神经通路是肠上皮5-羟色胺影响行为的传导途径。子宫内暴露于SSRI是生命第一年发生DGBI(功能性便秘)的一个重要且特定的危险因素,与母亲的抑郁症状无关。
这些发现为胃肠道如何调节情绪行为提供了基本见解,揭示了一种新的针对肠道的情绪调节治疗方法,并提示了子宫内暴露于SSRI与人类DGBI发生之间的新联系。