Brunetti Kaylee, Zhou Zicong, Shuchi Samia, Berry Raymond, White Sabrina, Zhang Yan, Allen Michael S, Yang Shaohua, Figueroa Johnny D, Colon-Perez Luis
Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Genetics, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
Addict Biol. 2025 Jun;30(6):e70059. doi: 10.1111/adb.70059.
Opioid agonists are known for their effects on the opioid and dopaminergic systems; however, new research points to complementary changes in the gut underlying maladaptive changes associated with opioid use. The gut-brain axis (GBA) is a bidirectional signaling process that permits feedback between the brain and gut and is altered in subjects with opioid use disorders, but the spatiotemporal correspondence between quantitative translational measures of gut and brain health is not clear. In this work, we determined longitudinal and concurrent changes in the brain and gut of rodents trained to self-administer morphine for 14 days. Active lever presses delivered a single infusion of morphine (0.4 mg/kg/infusion). We used MRI and 16s rDNA analysis of faecal matter to identify changes from baseline (naïve, nondrug state) to an acute phase (early in the self-administration process, after 2 days of self-administration) and a chronic phase (late in the self-administration process, after 14 days of self-administration). Animals were scanned in a 7T MRI scanner three times (baseline, acute and chronic), and before scanning, faecal matter was collected from each rat. We found early changes in gut microbiota diversity and specific abundance as early as the acute phase that persisted into the chronic phase. In MRI, we identified alterations in diffusivity indices both within subjects and between groups, showing a main effect in the striatum and thalamus. We posit that gut changes precede the effects observed in MRI, with the striatum and thalamus emerging as crucial links mediating communication between the gut and the brain.
阿片类激动剂因其对阿片和多巴胺能系统的作用而闻名;然而,新的研究指出,与阿片类药物使用相关的适应不良变化背后,肠道存在互补性变化。肠-脑轴(GBA)是一种双向信号传导过程,允许大脑和肠道之间进行反馈,在患有阿片类药物使用障碍的受试者中会发生改变,但肠道和大脑健康的定量转化指标之间的时空对应关系尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们确定了经训练自我注射吗啡14天的啮齿动物大脑和肠道的纵向及同步变化。主动按压杠杆会单次注射吗啡(0.4毫克/千克/次注射)。我们使用MRI和粪便的16s rDNA分析来确定从基线(未接触药物的原始状态)到急性期(自我给药过程早期,自我给药2天后)和慢性期(自我给药过程后期,自我给药14天后)的变化。动物在7T MRI扫描仪中扫描三次(基线、急性和慢性),在扫描前,从每只大鼠收集粪便。我们发现,早在急性期肠道微生物群多样性和特定丰度就出现了变化,并持续到慢性期。在MRI中,我们确定了受试者内部和组间扩散系数指数的改变,显示在纹状体和丘脑中存在主要影响。我们认为,肠道变化先于MRI观察到的效应,纹状体和丘脑是介导肠道与大脑之间通信的关键环节。