Barrera-Conde Marta, Korchevaya Elizaveta, Kossatz Elk, Veza Emma, Pujadas Mitona, Alechaga Élida, Nebot Pau, Pozo Oscar J, de la Torre Rafael, Pizarro Nieves, Robledo Patricia
Integrative Pharmacology and Systems Neuroscience Research Group, Neuroscience Research Programme, Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Department of Medicine and Life Sciences, University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.
Gut Microbes. 2025 Dec;17(1):2551104. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2025.2551104. Epub 2025 Sep 1.
Adolescence is characterized by an increased vulnerability to substance abuse, including alcohol consumption. We investigated the effects of a synbiotic intervention on disruptions of the microbiota-gut-brain axis induced by a drinking in the dark model of intermittent alcohol exposure in adolescent mice. We found that alcohol drinking induced specific shifts in gut microbiota, namely it increased Erysipelotrichaceae and reduced fecal butyric and isovaleric acids. In adulthood, other types of gut bacteria were affected such as and . Social and nonsocial cognitive impairments were also observed, and disruptions in prefrontal cortex β-hydroxybutyrate and glutamate metabolic profile in the hippocampus were apparent. Importantly, the synbiotic restored gut microbiota alterations and exerted beneficial effects on alcohol-induced behavioral impairments and brain metabolite changes. In correlational studies, we identified two potential functional networks, one relating gut microbiota ()-isovaleric acid with prefrontal glutamate metabolism and sociability, and the other relating SCFAs (propionic, butyric, valeric and isovaleric acids) with β-hydroxybutyrate in the hippocampus and reference memory. These results provide correlative data showing that synbiotic supplementation may restore delayed behavioral alterations induced by voluntary sub-binge alcohol drinking during adolescence through microbiota-gut-brain interactions, and might represent a potential therapeutic tool against long-term alcohol induced behavioral and molecular disturbances.
青春期的特点是对药物滥用(包括饮酒)的易感性增加。我们研究了合生元干预对青春期小鼠间歇性酒精暴露的暗饮模型所诱导的微生物群-肠-脑轴破坏的影响。我们发现,饮酒会导致肠道微生物群发生特定变化,即增加丹毒丝菌科,并降低粪便中的丁酸和异戊酸。在成年期,其他类型的肠道细菌也会受到影响,如 和 。还观察到社交和非社交认知障碍,并且前额叶皮质β-羟基丁酸和海马体中谷氨酸代谢谱的破坏很明显。重要的是,合生元恢复了肠道微生物群的改变,并对酒精诱导的行为障碍和脑代谢物变化产生了有益影响。在相关性研究中,我们确定了两个潜在的功能网络,一个将肠道微生物群( )-异戊酸与前额叶谷氨酸代谢和社交能力联系起来,另一个将短链脂肪酸(丙酸、丁酸、戊酸和异戊酸)与海马体中的β-羟基丁酸和参考记忆联系起来。这些结果提供了相关数据,表明补充合生元可能通过微生物群-肠-脑相互作用恢复青春期自愿亚暴饮酒精所诱导的延迟行为改变,并且可能代表一种针对长期酒精诱导的行为和分子干扰的潜在治疗工具。