生物
伏隔核
肠-脑轴
细胞生物学
微生物群
神经科学
遗传学
中枢神经系统
作者
Lingsha Cheng,Haoqian Wu,Xiaoying Cai,Youying Zhang,Siqi Yu,Yuanlong Hou,Zhe Yin,Qingyuan Yan,Li Wang,Taipeng Sun,Guangji Wang,Yonggui Yuan,Xueli Zhang,Haiping Hao,Xiao Zheng
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2023.12.009
摘要
Summary
Gene-environment interactions shape behavior and susceptibility to depression. However, little is known about the signaling pathways integrating genetic and environmental inputs to impact neurobehavioral outcomes. We report that gut G-protein-coupled receptor, Gpr35, engages a microbe-to-brain metabolic pathway to modulate neuronal plasticity and depressive behavior in mice. Psychological stress decreases intestinal epithelial Gpr35, genetic deletion of which induces depressive-like behavior in a microbiome-dependent manner. Gpr35−/− mice and individuals with depression have increased Parabacteroides distasonis, and its colonization to wild-type mice induces depression. Gpr35−/− and Parabacteroides distasonis-colonized mice show reduced indole-3-carboxaldehyde (IAld) and increased indole-3-lactate (ILA), which are produced from opposing branches along the bacterial catabolic pathway of tryptophan. IAld and ILA counteractively modulate neuroplasticity in the nucleus accumbens, a brain region linked to depression. IAld supplementation produces anti-depressant effects in mice with stress or gut epithelial Gpr35 deficiency. Together, these findings elucidate a gut microbe-brain signaling mechanism that underlies susceptibility to depression.
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