A growing pile of evidence indicates that the tens of trillions of microbes that normally live in our intestines — the so-called gut microbiome — have far-reaching effects on how our bodies function. Members of this microbial community produce vitamins, help us digest food, prevent the overgrowth of harmful bacteria and regulate the immune system, among other benefits. Now, a new study suggests that the gut microbiome also plays a key role in the health of our brains, according to researchers from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
The study, in mice, found that gut
bacteria — partly by producing compounds such as short chain fatty acids —
affect the behavior of immune cells throughout the body, including ones in the
brain that can damage brain tissue and exacerbate neurodegeneration in
conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease. The findings, published Jan. 13 in the
journal Science, open up the possibility of reshaping the gut microbiome as a
way to prevent or treat neurodegeneration.
“We gave young mice antibiotics for just
a week, and we saw a permanent change in their gut microbiomes, their immune
responses, and how much neurodegeneration related to a protein called tau they
experienced with age,” said senior author David M. Holtzman, MD, the Barbara Burton and Reuben M. Morriss III
Distinguished Professor of Neurology. “What’s exciting is that manipulating the
gut microbiome could be a way to have an effect on the brain without putting
anything directly into the brain.”
Evidence is accumulating that the gut
microbiomes in people with Alzheimer’s disease can differ from those of healthy
people. But it isn’t clear whether these differences are the cause or the result
of the disease — or both — and what effect altering the microbiome might have
on the course of the disease.
To determine whether the gut microbiome
may be playing a causal role, the researchers altered the gut microbiomes of
mice predisposed to develop Alzheimer’s-like brain damage and cognitive
impairment. The mice were genetically modified to express a mutant form of the
human brain protein tau, which builds up and causes damage to neurons and
atrophy of their brains by 9 months of age. They also carried a variant of the
human APOE gene, a major genetic risk factor for
Alzheimer’s. People with one copy of the APOE4 variant
are three to four times more likely to develop the disease than people with the
more common APOE3 variant.
Along with Holtzman, the research team
included gut microbiome expert and co-author Jeffrey I. Gordon, MD, the Dr. Robert J. Glaser Distinguished University
Professor and director of the Edison Family Center
for Genome Sciences & Systems Biology; first author Dong-Oh Seo, PhD, an instructor in neurology; and co-author Sangram S.
Sisodia, PhD, a professor of neurobiology at the University of Chicago.
When such genetically modified mice were
raised under sterile conditions from birth, they did not acquire gut
microbiomes, and their brains showed much less damage at 40 weeks of age than
the brains of mice harboring normal mouse microbiomes.
When such mice were raised under normal,
nonsterile conditions, they developed normal microbiomes. A course of
antibiotics at 2 weeks of age, however, permanently changed the composition of
bacteria in their microbiomes. For male mice, it also reduced the amount of
brain damage evident at 40 weeks of age. The protective effects of the
microbiome shifts were more pronounced in male mice carrying the APOE3 variant than in those with the high-risk APOE4 variant, possibly because the deleterious
effects of APOE4 canceled out some of the protection, the
researchers said. Antibiotic treatment had no significant effect on
neurodegeneration in female mice.
“We already know, from studies of brain
tumors, normal brain development and related topics, that immune cells in male
and female brains respond very differently to stimuli,” Holtzman said. “So it’s
not terribly surprising that when we manipulated the microbiome we saw a sex
difference in response, although it is hard to say what exactly this means for
men and women living with Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders.”
Further experiments linked three
specific short-chain fatty acids — compounds produced by certain types of gut
bacteria as products of their metabolism — to neurodegeneration. All three of
these fatty acids were scarce in mice with gut microbiomes altered by
antibiotic treatment, and undetectable in mice without gut microbiomes.
These short-chain fatty acids appeared
to trigger neurodegeneration by activating immune cells in the bloodstream,
which in turn somehow activated immune cells in the brain to damage brain
tissue. When middle-aged mice without microbiomes were fed the three
short-chain fatty acids, their brain immune cells became more reactive, and their
brains showed more signs of tau-linked damage.
“This study may offer important insights
into how the microbiome influences tau-mediated neurodegeneration, and suggests
therapies that alter gut microbes may affect the onset or progression of
neurodegenerative disorders,” said Linda McGavern, PhD, program director at the
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), which provided
some of the funding for the study.
The findings suggest a new approach to
preventing and treating neurodegenerative diseases by modifying the gut
microbiome with antibiotics, probiotics, specialized diets or other means.
“What I want to know is, if you took mice genetically destined to develop neurodegenerative disease, and you manipulated the microbiome just before the animals start showing signs of damage, could you slow or prevent neurodegeneration?” Holtzman asked. “That would be the equivalent of starting treatment in a person in late middle age who is still cognitively normal but on the verge of developing impairments. If we could start a treatment in these types of genetically sensitized adult animal models before neurodegeneration first becomes apparent, and show that it worked, that could be the kind of thing we could test in people.”
Source: https://medicine.wustl.edu/news/gut-bacteria-affect-brain-health-mouse-study-shows/
Journal article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.add1236
Source: Gut
bacteria affect brain health, mouse study shows – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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