Zhao Han, Zhou Xia, Song Yu, Zhao Wenming, Sun Zhongwu, Zhu Jiajia, Yu Yongqiang
Department of Radiology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University, Hefei, 230022, China.
Research Center of Clinical Medical Imaging, Anhui Province, Hefei, 230032, China.
Alzheimers Res Ther. 2025 Feb 1;17(1):36. doi: 10.1186/s13195-025-01683-0.
Gut microbiota dysbiosis is linked to Alzheimer's disease (AD), but our understanding of the molecular and neuropathological bases underlying such association remains fragmentary.
Using 16S rDNA amplicon sequencing, untargeted metabolomics, and multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging, we examined group differences in gut microbiome, fecal metabolome, neuroimaging measures, and cognitive variables across 30 patients with AD, 75 individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and 61 healthy controls (HC). Furthermore, we assessed the associations between these multi-omics changes using correlation and mediation analyses.
There were significant group differences in gut microbial composition, which were driven by 8 microbial taxa (e.g., Staphylococcus and Bacillus) exhibiting a progressive increase in relative abundance from HC to MCI to AD, and 2 taxa (e.g., Anaerostipes) showing a gradual decrease. 26 fecal metabolites (e.g., Arachidonic, Adrenic, and Lithocholic acids) exhibited a progressive increase from HC to MCI to AD. We also observed progressive gray matter atrophy in broadly distributed gray matter regions and gradual micro-structural integrity damage in widespread white matter tracts along the AD continuum. Integration of these multi-omics changes revealed significant associations between microbiota, metabolites, neuroimaging, and cognition. More importantly, we identified two potential mediation pathways: (1) microbiota → metabolites → neuroimaging → cognition, and (2) microbiota → metabolites → cognition.
Aside from elucidating the underlying mechanism whereby gut microbiota dysbiosis is linked to AD, our findings may contribute to groundwork for future interventions targeting the microbiota-metabolites-brain-cognition pathways as a therapeutic strategy in the AD continuum.
肠道微生物群失调与阿尔茨海默病(AD)有关,但我们对这种关联背后的分子和神经病理学基础的理解仍然支离破碎。
我们使用16S rDNA扩增子测序、非靶向代谢组学和多模态磁共振成像,检查了30例AD患者、75例轻度认知障碍(MCI)个体和61例健康对照(HC)在肠道微生物组、粪便代谢组、神经影像测量和认知变量方面的组间差异。此外,我们使用相关性和中介分析评估了这些多组学变化之间的关联。
肠道微生物组成存在显著的组间差异,由8种微生物分类群(如葡萄球菌和芽孢杆菌)驱动,其相对丰度从HC到MCI再到AD呈逐渐增加趋势,还有2种分类群(如厌氧短杆菌属)呈逐渐减少趋势。26种粪便代谢物(如花生四烯酸、肾上腺素和石胆酸)从HC到MCI再到AD呈逐渐增加趋势。我们还观察到在AD连续体中,广泛分布的灰质区域出现渐进性灰质萎缩,以及广泛的白质束出现逐渐的微结构完整性损伤。整合这些多组学变化揭示了微生物群、代谢物、神经影像和认知之间的显著关联。更重要的是,我们确定了两条潜在的中介途径:(1)微生物群→代谢物→神经影像→认知,以及(2)微生物群→代谢物→认知。
除了阐明肠道微生物群失调与AD相关的潜在机制外,我们的研究结果可能为未来针对微生物群 - 代谢物 - 脑 - 认知途径的干预措施奠定基础,作为AD连续体中的一种治疗策略。