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The gut microbiota-immune-brain axis: Therapeutic implications

Kenneth J. O’Riordan, Gerard M. Moloney, Lily Keane, Gerard Clarke, John F. Cryan

2025Cell Reports Medicine229 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The microbiota-gut-brain axis has major implications for human health including gastrointestinal physiology, brain function, and behavior. The immune system represents a key pathway of communication along this axis with the microbiome implicated in neuroinflammation in health and disease. In this review, we discuss the mechanisms as to how the gut microbiota interacts with the brain, focusing on innate and adaptive immunity that are often disrupted in gut-brain axis disorders. We also consider the implications of these observations and how they can be advanced by interdisciplinary research. Leveraging an increased understanding of how these interactions regulate immunity has the potential to usher in a new era of precision neuropsychiatric clinical interventions for psychiatric, neurodevelopmental, and neurological disorders. The gut microbiota-immune-brain axis regulates key immune pathways influencing neuroinflammation and brain function. This review highlights how gut-immune communication impacts health and disease, emphasizing the potential of these insights to drive precision therapies for neuropsychiatric disorders.

Topics & Concepts

Gut–brain axisNeuroinflammationNeuroscienceGut floraImmune systemMicrobiomeBrain functionGut microbiomeImmunityInnate immune systemDiseaseAcquired immune systemNeuroimmunologyBiologyPsychologyImmunologyCentral nervous systemMedicineBioinformaticsInflammationPathologyGut microbiota and healthTryptophan and brain disordersGastrointestinal motility and disorders
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