神经发生
细菌
无特定病原体
生物
肠道菌群
粪便细菌疗法
细胞生物学
免疫学
医学
神经科学
微生物学
抗生素
病毒
艰难梭菌
作者
Parag Kundu,Hae Ung Lee,Isabel García‐Pérez,Emmy Xue Yun Tay,Hye-Jin Kim,Llanto Elma Faylon,Katherine A. Martin,Rikky W. Purbojati,Daniela I. Drautz‐Moses,Sujoy Ghosh,Jeremy K. Nicholson,Stephan C. Schuster,Elaine Holmes,Sven Pettersson
出处
期刊:Science Translational Medicine
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2019-11-13
卷期号:11 (518)
被引量:151
标识
DOI:10.1126/scitranslmed.aau4760
摘要
The gut microbiota evolves as the host ages, yet the effects of these microbial changes on host physiology and energy homeostasis are poorly understood. To investigate these potential effects, we transplanted the gut microbiota of old or young mice into young germ-free recipient mice. Both groups showed similar weight gain and skeletal muscle mass, but germ-free mice receiving a gut microbiota transplant from old donor mice unexpectedly showed increased neurogenesis in the hippocampus of the brain and increased intestinal growth. Metagenomic analysis revealed age-sensitive enrichment in butyrate-producing microbes in young germ-free mice transplanted with the gut microbiota of old donor mice. The higher concentration of gut microbiota-derived butyrate in these young transplanted mice was associated with an increase in the pleiotropic and prolongevity hormone fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21). An increase in FGF21 correlated with increased AMPK and SIRT-1 activation and reduced mTOR signaling. Young germ-free mice treated with exogenous sodium butyrate recapitulated the prolongevity phenotype observed in young germ-free mice receiving a gut microbiota transplant from old donor mice. These results suggest that gut microbiota transplants from aged hosts conferred beneficial effects in responsive young recipients.
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