微生物群
迷走神经张力
迷走神经
生物
内科学
神经科学
医学
心率变异性
生物信息学
心率
血压
刺激
作者
Hao Chang,Matthew H. Perkins,Leonardo Santana Novaes,Qian Feng,Wenfei Han,Ivan E. de Araújo
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.06.02.594027
摘要
Psychological states can regulate intestinal mucosal immunity by altering the gut microbiome. However, the link between the brain and microbiome composition remains elusive. We show that Brunner’s glands in the duodenal submucosa couple brain activity to intestinal bacterial homeostasis. Brunner’s glands mediated the enrichment of gut probiotic species in response to stimulation of abdominal vagal fibers. Cell-specific ablation of the glands triggered transmissible dysbiosis associated with an immunodeficiency syndrome that led to mortality upon gut infection with pathogens. The syndrome could be largely prevented by oral or intra-intestinal administration of probiotics. In the forebrain, we identified a vagally-mediated, polysynaptic circuit connecting the glands of Brunner to the central nucleus of the amygdala. Intra-vital imaging revealed that excitation of central amygdala neurons activated Brunner’s glands and promoted the growth of probiotic populations. Our findings unveil a vagal-glandular neuroimmune circuitry that may be targeted for the modulation of the gut microbiome. The glands of Brunner may be the critical cells that regulate the levels of Lactobacilli species in the intestine.
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