Gut‐brain axis serotonergic responses to acute stress exposure are microbiome‐dependent

Joshua M. Lyte, Cassandra E. Gheorghe, Michael S. Goodson, Nancy Kelley‐Loughnane, Timothy G. Dinan, John F. Cryan, Gerard Clarke
Neurogastroenterology Motil. 2020-05-11; 32(11):
DOI: 10.1111/nmo.13881

PubMed
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AbstractBackgroundUnderstanding the mechanisms underpinning the response to acute stress is critical for determining how this can be modulated in both health and disease and across sexes. Stress can markedly alter the microbiome and gut‐brain axis signaling with the serotonergic system being particularly sensitive to acute stress. As the impact of acute stress on regional serotonergic dynamics in the gut‐brain axis and the contribution of the microbiome to this are poorly appreciated, we used microbiota‐deficient mice to assess whether the serotonergic response to acute stress exposure is microbiome dependent.MethodsAdult male and female conventional, germ‐free, and colonized germ‐free mice underwent a single acute stressor and samples were harvested immediately or 45 minutes following stress. Serotonin and related metabolites and serotonergic gene expression were determined.Key ResultsOur data clearly show the microbiota influenced gastrointestinal serotonergic response to acute stress in a sex‐ and region‐dependent manner. Male‐specific poststress increases in colonic serotonin were absent in germ‐free mice but normalized following colonization. mRNA serotonergic gene expression was differentially expressed in colon and ileum of germ‐free mice on a sex‐dependent basis. Within the frontal cortex, absence of the microbiome altered basal serotonin, its main metabolite 5‐hydroxyindoleacetic acid, and prevented stress‐induced increases in serotonin turnover.Conclusions and InferencesThe gut microbiome influences the set points of the brain and gastrointestinal serotonergic systems and affected their response to acute stress in a sex‐ and region‐dependent manner.

Auteurs Bordeaux Neurocampus