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Immunoregulatory role of the gut microbiota in inflammatory depression

Penghong Liu, Zhifen Liu, Jizhi Wang, Junyan Wang, Mingxue Gao, Yanyan Zhang, Chunxia Yang, Ai‐Xia Zhang, Gaizhi Li, Xinrong Li, Sha Liu, Lixin Liu, Ning Sun, Kerang Zhang

2024Nature Communications215 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Inflammatory depression is a treatment-resistant subtype of depression. A causal role of the gut microbiota as a source of low-grade inflammation remains unclear. Here, as part of an observational trial, we first analyze the gut microbiota composition in the stool, inflammatory factors and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) in plasma, and inflammatory and permeability markers in the intestinal mucosa of patients with inflammatory depression (ChiCTR1900025175). Gut microbiota of patients with inflammatory depression exhibits higher Bacteroides and lower Clostridium, with an increase in SCFA-producing species with abnormal butanoate metabolism. We then perform fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotic supplementation in animal experiments to determine the causal role of the gut microbiota in inflammatory depression. After FMT, the gut microbiota of the inflammatory depression group shows increased peripheral and central inflammatory factors and intestinal mucosal permeability in recipient mice with depressive and anxiety-like behaviors. Clostridium butyricum administration normalizes the gut microbiota, decreases inflammatory factors, and displays antidepressant-like effects in a mouse model of inflammatory depression. These findings suggest that inflammatory processes derived from the gut microbiota can be involved in neuroinflammation of inflammatory depression.

Topics & Concepts

Gut floraClostridium butyricumBacteroidesInflammationGut–brain axisNeuroinflammationImmunologyProbioticMedicineDepression (economics)LipopolysaccharideInflammatory bowel diseaseIntestinal permeabilityBiologyInternal medicineDiseaseBacteriaMacroeconomicsEconomicsGeneticsTryptophan and brain disordersGut microbiota and healthStress Responses and Cortisol