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Perturbation of mammary immunoglobulins during maternal antibiotic administration
Project Summary Prescribed in up to 40% of pregnancies, antibiotics represent the most commonly used class of medication during pregnancy. Although this practice is often necessary for maternal health, accumulating evidence suggests that antibiotic exposure may have unintended consequences for the mother-infant dyad. Epidemiologic studies associate maternal antibiotic exposure, especially in the absence of infection, with increased risk of neonatal complications including late-onset sepsis (LOS) and necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), yet the mechanisms driving these associations remain poorly understood. Secretory IgA (sIgA) in milk is an essential component of neonatal mucosal immunity, shaping early gut microbial colonization and providing protection against enteric pathogens. The mechanisms by which maternal physiology regulates the abundance and microbial specificity of these antibodies in milk remain poorly understood. In animal models, the maternal gut–mammary axis governs the generation of milk IgA: IgA-committed lymphocytes from the maternal intestine migrate to the mammary gland during advancing pregnancy via CCL- 28/CCR10 signaling. Our preliminary data suggest that maternal antibiotic exposure disrupts this process leading to a decrease in milk IgA. However, the timing and extent of antibody dysbiosis are undefined; the downstream effects on neonatal intestinal health are unknown; and the underlying mechanisms—whether due to altered microbial stimulation, impaired recruitment of IgA⁺ cells to the mammary gland, or both—remain to be elucidated. Our central hypothesis is that maternal antibiotic exposure reduces pathogen-reactive IgA in milk by impairing gut-to-mammary immune cell trafficking thereby compromising neonatal mucosal immunity and increasing infection susceptibility. We will address this hypothesis through three integrated aims: (1) Determine the magnitude and duration of antibiotic-mediated mammary antibody dysbiosis in women who deliver preterm and at term; (2) Identify microbial targets of mammary antibodies diminished by maternal antibiotic exposure and (3 Determine the role of maternal antibiotics in the disruption of mammary resident IgA+ plasma cells in animal models. This integrative human and animal study will uncover critical mechanisms by which maternal antibiotic use alters the maternal-infant immune axis. The results will provide mechanistic insight into the risks associated with perinatal antibiotic exposure and inform clinical strategies to mitigate risk to neonatal health.
The Role of the Intestinal Microbiota in Sepsis Mortality
Project Summary/Abstract Sepsis is a life-threatening condition characterized by a dysregulated host response to infection that can cause multi-organ damage and death. As the leading cause of in-hospital mortality, sepsis mortality rates reach up to 50%, and account for approximately 270,000 deaths and $38 billion annually in health care costs in the United States. Notably, patients with similar medical backgrounds can have vastly different sepsis outcomes— some survive with medical treatment while others die. The reasons for this dichotomy are unknown but is seen across all forms of bacterial bloodstream infections, is not specific to any strain-level differences in the infecting pathogen and cannot be explained by human genetic differences. Human microbiota studies suggest that gut microbial dysbiosis is associated with sepsis mortality and that these alterations influence gut barrier breakdown, leading to gram-negative bacteremia—one of the most common causes of sepsis and mortality. However, there are a lack of studies that investigate the causal role of the intestinal microbiota in sepsis mortality. This K08 proposal will elucidate the role of the intestinal microbiota in sepsis mortality. Utilizing the well- established murine model of sepsis by intraperitoneal injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), we combine microbiota taxonomic sequencing and metagenomics, advanced bioinformatic techniques and prediction modeling, with knowledge of mucosal immunity and germ-free mouse systems to characterize the microbiota features and members that correlate with, predict, and cause sepsis mortality. This proposal is organized into two specific aims: (1) identify baseline stool microbial features associated with and predictive of sepsis outcomes and (2) determine how colonization with immunostimulatory microbes heightens sepsis mortality. In this work, I will holistically characterize the host immunologic and microbiota features that are associated with and predictive of mortality and experimentally identify microbes and microbial pathways that cause death in our model. These findings will reveal new microbial and host biomarkers of sepsis mortality and identify novel targets for sepsis prevention and treatment to reduce the overall mortality rate of this deadly disease. My long-term goal is to become an independent physician-scientist who integrates cutting-edge computational methods with experimental biology to identify predictive biomarkers of disease onset and outcomes, investigate how they influence disease processes, and develop novel therapeutic and preventive strategies to improve patient care. This proposal details specific research aims and a structured career development and training plan that will allow me to acquire focused, in-depth and multidisciplinary training under the guidance of an internationally recognized team of experts in clinical infectious diseases, host-microbiota interactions, immunology, immunometabolism, and computational biology. The knowledge generated will address the fundamental role of the microbiota in sepsis outcomes and inform future preventative and therapeutic strategies that will lower the sepsis mortality rate worldwide.
Specificity requirements and functional properties of microbiota-reactive peri-weaning Tregs
PROJECT SUMMARY This application seeks to define the specificity requirements and functional properties of regulatory T cells (Tregs) that maintain tolerance to the microbiota. RORgt+ Tregs generated during an early-life peri-weaning window (from approximately P14 to P28 in mice) are particularly critical for intestinal tolerance. Mice that first encounter their microbiota outside this window still generate Tregs, but these cells are functionally inferior to those induced during the peri-weaning period and fail to maintain tolerance. The features of peri-weaning Tregs that make them so essential for intestinal homeostasis are not well defined. Here we propose to test two non-mutually exclusive hypotheses: 1) that the unique functionality of peri-weaning Tregs requires a distinct functional state; and 2) that reactivity with specific members of the microbiota is required for peri-weaning Tregs to maintain intestinal tolerance to a complex SPF microbiota. We have developed a model of intestinal inflammation based on oral delivery of the non-steroidal anti- inflammatory drug (NSAID) piroxicam that reveals underlying immune dysregulation in mice with defects in peri-weaning Tregs. When we applied this model to gnotobiotic mice colonized with defined microbiota communities we found that one community (OMM12) induced Tregs capable of preventing inflammation while the other community (ASF) did not, despite similar induction of RORgt+ peri-weaning Tregs by both communities. This exciting result suggests a previously unappreciated specificity requirement for induction of peri-weaning Tregs and indicates that differences in the microbes encountered early in life can have lifelong ramifications for immune tolerance. To better understand the basis of this specificity requirement, we developed a pipeline to rapidly screen the reactivity of T cells and applied it to mice colonized with the protective OMM12 community. This analysis revealed that the antigen-specific Treg response is biased toward only a subset of the microbiota. Thus, by tracking and characterizing microbiota-reactive peri-weaning Tregs at unprecedented resolution, we uncovered an unexpected bias in the microbiota-reactivity of Tregs. We are now ideally positioned to examine how the specificities and functional properties of peri-weaning Tregs are linked to their unique role in intestinal tolerance. In Aim 1, we will define the specificity of microbiota- reactive peri-weaning Tregs at homeostasis, using new tools developed through our screening pipeline, and we will determine whether missing the weaning period alters Treg responses to the microbiota. In Aim 2, we will compare the transcriptional programs of peri-weaning and post-weaning Tregs to identify peri-weaning- specific features. We will also build on our analyses from Aim 1 to determine if functional differences are linked to reactivity with specific members of the microbiota. In Aim 3, we will explore why specific members of the microbiota are required for induction of protective peri-weaning Tregs. We will define communities of microbes that do or do not confer protection in our piroxicam model, and we will profile the Tregs in these communities, including microbiota-reactive Tregs with defined specificities, to test the hypothesis that a key aspect of peri- weaning Treg function is specificity for only certain gut microbes.
Mechanisms of Commensal- Specific CD8+ T Cell Differentiation, Restraint and Dysregulation in Intestinal Inflammation
PROJECT SUMMARY Our understanding of immunity largely stems from models of infection with pathogenic microbes. However, the vast majority of microbial-immune encounters occur as a symbiotic relationship with the commensal microbiota. Recently, the contribution of commensal-specific T cells to host physiology has received significant attention. These commensal-specific responses not only control microbiota containment but also promote immune tolerance within the gastrointestinal tract. While commensal-specific CD4+ T cell responses in the lamina propria have dominated models of mucosal immune regulation, these are vastly outnumbered by CD8+ intraepithelial lymphocytes within the epithelium. How CD8+ T cell responses to gut microbiota are primed, differentiate and function under homeostasis has not been addressed. Conversely, aberrant immunity to commensal microbes has been proposed to underlie pathologies of barrier tissues, including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), where commensal-specific T cells accumulate in blood and intestinal tissues of afflicted patients. A better understanding of the properties and functions of commensal-specific T cell responses is therefore fundamental to studies of tissue immunity in health and disease. Our long term goal is to better understand how commensal-specific T cell responses contribute to barrier tissue homeostasis, and the objective in this application is to investigate the mechanisms regulating induction of commensal-specific CD8+ T cells in homeostasis and how they become dysregulated in IBD. Our rationale for the proposed work is that uncovering these mechanisms has the potential to translate into new therapeutic approaches. Our central hypothesis is that commensal-specific CD8+ T cells develop as functionally restrained intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) under homeostasis, but that perturbation of local immune regulation within the intestinal epithelium, in the case of patients with ulcerative colitis, by autoantibody-mediated blockade of integrin avb6 results in aberrant CD8+ effector T cell responses in IBD. Based on strong preliminary data, we will test three specific aims: (1) Determine key antigen-presenting cells (APC) priming SFB-specific CD8⍺β+ IEL. (2) Identify how cell-intrinsic pathways drive differentiation, maintenance and restraint of SFB-specific CD8⍺β+ pIEL. (3) Determine how pathogenic KLRG1+Eomes+ CD8+ T cells arise and contribute to inflammation in murine models of ulcerative colitis Our approach is innovative as it investigates new mechanisms of immunity unique to commensal-specific CD8+ T cell responses. The proposed work is significant because it will establish new insights into the interaction and communication between commensal microbes and immune cells in the gut environment and identify potential targets for therapeutic intervention in conditions of chronic intestinal inflammation.
Pilot and Feasibility Program
PILOT AND FEASIBILITY PROGRAM: PROJECT SUMMARY The goal of the Cedars-Sinai Digestive Diseases Research Center (CSDDRC) Pilot and Feasibility (P&F) Program is to provide monetary support, expertise, and technical support to advance innovative basic, translational, and clinical research that matches the overall goal and themes of the Center. The central theme of the CSDDRC is mechanisms and measurements of the fibroinflammatory response in gastrointestinal (GI) tissues, which reflects Center members’ research in three subthemes: 1) Gut Microbiome, 2) Gastrointestinal (GI) and Liver Metabolism, and 3) GI and Liver Injury. The mission of CSDDRC P&F Program is to support new investigators, established investigators who are new to digestive and liver disease research, and established digestive and liver disease investigators who want to start new or collaborative research that promises to lead to a paradigm shift in the digestive diseases field. In partnership with the Enrichment Program, we will provide guidance for P&F awardees in the form of mentorship and collaboration opportunities. The CSDDRC Biomedical Research Cores will also support P&F awardees, facilitating rapid progress of their new and collaborative digestive and liver disease research. The P&F Program’s outcome measures will include the number of high-impact research publications, grant applications, and subsequent extramural funding for P&F awardees. We will accomplish our goals through the following three specific aims. Aim 1 will solicit research proposals from P&F candidates whose proposed research aligns with the central theme and the subthemes of the CSDDRC. We will advertise P&F support widely across campuses, in addition to contacting department/institute directors to solicit their recommendations for promising young and established investigators who are interested in working in digestive and liver diseases. Aim 2 will select pilot project applications that meet CSDDRC P&F Program goals using rigorous review criteria. Each year, the P&F Program will select four pilot projects to be funded by the P30 grant and matched by institutional support. Submitted applications will be peer- reviewed and preliminarily scored based on the NIH review format by three local expert reviewers. Subsequently, after oral presentations by the P&F applicants, the External Advisory Board (EAB) members will undertake a second round of review, scoring, and discussion at the P&F Program Review meeting following the CSDDRC Annual Symposium. Funding decisions will be made during the P&F Program Review meeting. Aim 3 will assist P&F project investigators with career development and obtaining extramural funding for digestive disease research. P&F awardees will benefit from the Enrichment Program’s well-organized mentoring structure, led by experienced members of the CSDDRC, which includes the Grants-in-Progress Mentoring Program, Gastrointestinal Research-in-Progress meetings, and grant application workshops. P&F awardees will also be mentored through direct interactions with P&F Program Directors, Core Directors, members of the Internal Advisory Board and EAB, and individual or collaborative mentor teams.
Defining Microbial and Host Pathways Driving Asymptomatic C. difficile Colonization Associated with Aging and High-Sugar Diets
SUMMARY Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of healthcare-associated diarrhea, with rising incidence in community settings and a growing burden of asymptomatic colonization. Asymptomatic car- riers, particularly among the elderly and individuals consuming high-sugar diets, represent a critical but underexplored reservoir for transmission and disease progression. This proposal introduces novel, anti- biotic-independent mouse models demonstrating that both dietary sugar and aging independently pro- mote asymptomatic C. difficile colonization. We hypothesize that these factors disrupt colonization re- sistance (CR) through distinct but overlapping microbial, metabolic, and immune pathways. In Aim 1, we will define how traditional and emerging dietary sugars alter the gut environment to permit C. difficile colonization using in vitro bioreactors and in vivo models. Aim 2 will identify age-associated changes in microbiota and mucosal immunity that impair CR, using longitudinal studies and fecal micro- biota transfer. Aim 3 will functionally validate C. difficile genes upregulated during asymptomatic carriage using CRISPR-Cas9 mutants in both sugar- and age-induced models. This integrative, multi-omics approach will uncover the mechanisms enabling asymptomatic colonization and identify microbial and host targets for intervention. The findings will inform microbiome-based strat- egies to prevent CDI in vulnerable populations and shift current paradigms in CDI risk assessment and prevention.
Systems Biology of Early Atopy: Role of Human Milk (SunBEAm-Milk)
Surprisingly little is known about the effect of breastfeeding (BF) on infant immune system development besides an effect on the gut microbiome, but its impact on metabolites and Tregs could support protection against food allergy (FA). BF is currently recommended to prevent the development of allergic diseases, especially asthma/recurrent wheezing and AD in early childhood, but firm conclusions could not be drawn regarding FA due to high heterogeneity and low quality of studies. Reverse causation, recall bias and the poor accuracy of outcome assessment are significant limitations. Most are inadequately powered to specific FA; however, a recent study showed that exclusively BF infants had lower odds of egg, sesame, and peanut allergies. Importantly, immunomodulatory composition of HM varies between mothers, which has not been taken into consideration. For over two decades we have been developing methods to assess immunomodulatory factors in the complex matrix of HM and their association with infant FA. We have shown that high levels of HM total and specific IgA are associated with protection against cow’s milk allergy, but it is unclear whether HM IgA is responsible for or is a biomarker of the vertical transfer of protection. Infant fecal and systemic IgA levels during breastfeeding and after weaning are also elevated in infants at low risk for atopic disease raising the question of whether HM factors such as cytokines can promote IgA production in infants. Consistent with this, we showed that HM cytokines, such as APRIL, induce IgA production in naïve infant B cells, and infants receiving HM with higher levels of APRIL had lower incidence of allergic disease. Finally, lower levels of several HM fatty acids including short-chain fatty acids and DHA were associated with FA. While some these factors were are associated with maternal atopic disease, several of them are not and suggest a role for diet instead. The System Biology of Early Atopy (SunBEAm) population-based cohort of 2500 mother-infant pairs is >50% recruited and provides an unprecedented opportunity to assess association of HM feeding and immune factors in HM with development of infant immune system and FA/AD. The Common Sample comprises a subset of 100 dyads with FA, 100 with FA+AD, 100 with AD, 100 with no FA or AD and more extensively profiled biological data. Utilizing all 2-month HM samples available in the Common Sample, we will assess levels of immune factors in HM and their association with maternal/infant characteristics (Aim 1). Utilizing data from the whole cohort, we will assess the association between HM vs formula feeding on well-defined FA/AD further adjusted based on high vs low levels of HM immune components in the Common Sample (Aim 2b). Finally, we will examine the immune cell and epithelial effects of HM on infant immune markers and intestinal organoids (Aim 3). Key findings will be validated in an independent birth cohort. The ultimate goal is to uncover protective properties of BF and HM in FA and subsequent design of policies and prevention strategies to address the increasing rates of FA.
Response and defense mechanisms of extraintestinal Escherichia coli to reactive oxygen and chlorine species
Members of the Escherichia coli species are remarkably diverse and comprise commensal, probiotic and pathogenic strains. While some pathogenic E. coli cause intestinal diseases, extraintestinal E. coli (ExPEC) can colonize and infect environments outside the gut. For instance, members of this pathotype can inhabit the urinary tract where they are confronted with a multitude of bactericidal host defense strategies, which requires specialized genetic adaption for survival. ExPEC must defend highly toxic antimicrobials such as hypochlorous acid (HOCl), a potent reactive oxygen and chlorine species (RO/CS) generated during neutrophil-mediated phagocytosis and by enzymes in uroepithelial cells to control bacterial colonization. The increasing rate of ExPEC infections in humans due to changing infection dynamics demonstrate the critical need for a better understanding of ExPEC pathogenesis, which is desperately needed to improve approaches for infection prevention and treatment given the rise in antibiotic resistance spreading among E. coli. Our lab has reported that members of the ExPEC pathotype are more resistant to RCS in vitro and to neutrophil-mediated phagocytosis when compared to non-pathogenic and enteropathogenic E. coli. We identified the defense system responsible for these phenotypes and characterized its regulation during RCS stress: the RcrR regulon consisting of the rcrARB genes is controlled by the RCS-sensing transcriptional repressor RcrR, which reversibly loses its repressor activity upon oxidation by RCS, resulting in de-repression of its downstream targets. Induced expression of rcrB contributes significantly to ExPEC’s increased RCS resistance, however, the precise mechanism of RcrB and the role of RcrA (and potentially other defense players) during RCS stress remain enigmatic. Our long-term goal is to increase the efficacy of existing antimicrobial therapies by purposefully and selectively sensitizing ExPEC to clearance by innate immune cells. The overall objective of this application is a comprehensive analysis of ExPEC’s RCS defense with particular focus on the mechanism of the RcrR regulon. We hypothesize that RcrB directly protects cells from HOCl, while RcrA, another member of the RcrR regulon, mediates evasion from HOCl and invasion into host cells. In Aim 1, we will use phenotypic, biochemical, and imaging approaches to investigate the mechanism by which RcrB contributes to ExPEC’s increased RCS resistance. In Aim 2, we will study the role of RcrA for ExPEC motility, biofilm formation, and host cell invasion. In Aim 3, we will use independent unbiased and targeted approaches, including phenotypic characterization of transposon mutants, to fully comprehend ExPEC-specific responses to and defenses against RCS. Identifying, characterizing and targeting ExPEC-specific defense systems has the potential to increase the body’s own capacity to fight UTIs. Overall, we will involve at least four undergraduate students in our research projects, which we believe will provide an excellent training opportunity for the next generation of scientists.
Enteric virus-induced innate immune responses in oral tolerance
Project Summary The human gut must constantly balance between defending against harmful microbe, including virus infections, and tolerating harmless substances, like food. One important immune process called oral tolerance helps prevent the immune system from overreacting to dietary proteins such as gluten. When this tolerance breaks down, known as loss of oral tolerance (LOT), it can lead to celiac disease, where the body mounts an immune attack against gluten. Viruses that infect the gut, known as enteric viruses, can disturb the intestinal immune homeostasis and contribute to gastrointestinal diseases. Our research has found that one such virus, the Type 1 Lang (T1L) strain of reovirus, capable of infecting human and mice, can induce LOT to gluten. We discovered that T1L triggers a type of inflammatory cell death called necroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. This cell death sends danger signals to dendritic cells (DCs) presenting dietary antigens, including gluten to T cells. These signals appear to shift DCs from a tolerance-promoting mode to one that drives inflammation and gluten-specific TH1 responses, a hallmark of celiac disease. We believe this process begins when the virus produces a specific form of RNA called Z-RNA, which is sensed by a host protein called ZBP1, triggering necroptosis and inflammation. Our research aims to understand this pathway in detail. Aim 1 will investigate how ZBP1 detects viral Z-RNA and induces necroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. Aim 2 will examine how this necroptosis leads to LOT and will test whether blocking or engaging the pathway can prevent or induce inflammatory dietary antigen-specific TH1 immune responses. By revealing how a common virus can break oral tolerance and trigger inflammation, this study could lead to new ways to prevent or treat autoimmune and food-related disease such as celiac disease.
Addressing C-F bonds and amyloid-formation in biological systems
The ingestion, pulmonary inhalation, and dermal infiltration of C-F bond-containing compounds, most commonly found in the form of per- and polyfluoroalkyl organic acids, causes oxidative stress, inflammation, DNA damage, and developmental defects in infants and adults. These chemicals accumulate in the brain, disrupt neurological function and compromise cognitive and locomotory behavior. Yet, we lack a high-resolution road-map of the interactions between C-F bonds and biomolecular assemblies driving the trajectory towards neurodegenerative outcomes. This gap constitutes a significant barrier to advancing measures designed to mitigate C-F chemistry-associated neurotoxicity. Emerging experimental and computational data from our laboratory reveals that perfluorooctanoic acid, perfluorodecanoic acid and perfluorosulfonic acid corrupt biomolecular structures through C-F:side-chain interactions in tested soluble, globular proteins found in milk and tissues (matrices where C-F chemistries have been detected). Furthermore, they impaired the physiological function in these proteins through displacement of physiological ligands or by compromising the binding of co-factors. The neuroblastoma-derived SHSY-5Y cell line insulted with the said C-F moieties displayed altered gene expression corresponding to reactive oxygen species (ROS), protein ubiquitination, inflammation along with compromised cytoskeletal integrity. C-F bond ingestion ablated dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the nematode C. elegans and induced locomotory deficits in a manner mimicking paraquat. Based on these findings, we propose to gather data towards our hypothesis that C-F bond exposure perturbs biomolecular, cellular and organismal assemblies to onset neurodegeneration-linked trajectories. In Aim 1, we will determine whether organic fluoroacids alter mRNA levels in differentiated SHSY-5Y cells and in neuroprotective gut bacteria (Lactobacillus rhamnosus, Bifidobacterium lactis and Lactobacillus acidophilus). We will examine whether the neuroblastoma cell line exposed to C-F chemistry displays readouts designed to inform the onset of neurodegeneration-associated trajectories (including α-synuclein aggregation). In Aim 2, we will further address in a preclinical model whether C-F burden induces protein aggregation (α-synuclein, amyloid β, mHTT), interferes with dopaminergic neuronal assembles and induces locomotory deficits. Completion of the proposed work will complement ongoing experimental biophysical, structural (crystallographic, NMR) and computational (docking, molecular dynamics simulations) mapping of the interactions between these anthropogenic “forever” chemicals and amyloid-forming proteins potentially resulting in a soluble-to-toxic transformation. It will prepare the stage for vertebrate testing. The findings from this relatively understudied area likely exposes interventional targets for C-F chemistry associated neurotoxicity, spurs therapeutic efforts and can also guide the development of more biocompatible alternatives.
From heterogeneous wiring to degenerative function in motion-detection circuits
Gut/Body interactions in health and disease
The adult intestine is a major barrier epithelium and coordinator of multi-organ functions. Stem cells constantly repair the intestinal epithelium by adjusting their proliferation and differentiation to tissue intrinsic as well as micro- and macro-environmental signals. How these signals integrate to control intestinal and whole-body homeostasis is largely unknown. Addressing this gap in knowledge is central to an improved understanding of intestinal pathophysiology and its systemic consequences. Combining Drosophila and mammalian model systems my laboratory has discovered fundamental mechanisms driving intestinal regeneration and tumourigenesis and outlined complex inter-organ signaling regulating health and disease. During my talk, I will discuss inter-related areas of research from my lab, including:1- Interactions between the intestine and its microenvironment influencing intestinal regeneration and tumourigenesis. 2- Long-range signals from the intestine impacting whole-body in health and disease.
From the guts to the brain through adaptive immunity in the prevention of Alzheimer’ disease
Dr. Pasinetti is the Saunders Family Chair and Professor of Neurology at Icahn School of medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. His studies allowed him to develop novel therapeutic approaches through investigation of preventable risk factors including mood disorders in the promotion of resilience against neurodegenerative disorder. In his presentation Dr. Pasinetti will discuss novel concepts about the gut-brain axis in mechanisms associated to peripheral adaptive immunity as therapeutic targets to mitigate the onset and the progression of Alzheimer’s disease and other form of dementia.
Identification of dendritic cell-T cell interactions driving immune responses to food
A microbiome-dependent gut-brain pathway regulates motivation for exercise
PIEZO2 in somatosensory neurons coordinates gastrointestinal transit
The transit of food through the gastrointestinal tract is critical for nutrient absorption and survival, and the gastrointestinal tract has the ability to initiate motility reflexes triggered by luminal distention. This complex function depends on the crosstalk between extrinsic and intrinsic neuronal innervation within the intestine, as well as local specialized enteroendocrine cells. However, the molecular mechanisms and the subset of sensory neurons underlying the initiation and regulation of intestinal motility remain largely unknown. Here, we show that humans lacking PIEZO2 exhibit impaired bowel sensation and motility. Piezo2 in mouse dorsal root but not nodose ganglia is required to sense gut content, and this activity slows down food transit rates in the stomach, small intestine, and colon. Indeed, Piezo2 is directly required to detect colon distension in vivo. Our study unveils the mechanosensory mechanisms that regulate the transit of luminal contents throughout the gut, which is a critical process to ensure proper digestion, nutrient absorption, and waste removal. These findings set the foundation of future work to identify the highly regulated interactions between sensory neurons, enteric neurons and non- neuronal cells that control gastrointestinal motility.
Immune regulation by fungal strain diversity in inflammatory bowel disease
Gut-brain circuits for fat preference
Gut-to-brain communication of nutritional information prioritizes courtship over feeding
The person-to-person transmission landscape of the gut and oral microbiomes
Nociceptor neurons direct goblet cells via a CGRP-RAMP1 axis to drive mucus production and gut barrier protection
Beta oscillations in the basal ganglia: Past, Present and Future; Oscillatory signatures of motor symptoms across movement disorders
On Wednesday, January 25th, at noon ET / 6PM CET, we will host Roxanne Lofredi and Hagai Bergman. Roxanne Lofredi, MD, is a research fellow in the Movement Disorders and Neuromodulation Unit at Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin. Hagai Bergman, MD, PhD, is a Professor of Physiology in the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Research and Faculty of Medicine at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and is Simone and Bernard Guttman Chair in Brain Research. Beside his scientific presentation on “Beta oscillations in the basal ganglia: Past, Present and Future”, he will also give us a glimpse at the “Person behind the science”. The talks will be followed by a shared discussion. You can register via talks.stimulatingbrains.org to receive the (free) Zoom link!
How can we treat visceral pain?
Chronic pain is a leading cause of morbidity, common to patients with gastrointestinal diseases such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Most pain killers are largely ineffective against this type of pain or restricted for use in these patients due to gut related complications and risk of addition. A significant unmet clinical need therefore exists to develop novel non-opioid based visceral analgesics.
Gut food cravings? How gut signals control appetite and metabolism
Gut-derived signals regulate metabolism, appetite, and behaviors important for mental health. We have performed a large-scale multidimensional screen to identify gut hormones and nutrient-sensing mechanisms in the intestine that regulate metabolism and behavior in the fruit fly Drosophila. We identified several gut hormones that affect fecundity, stress responses, metabolism, feeding, and sleep behaviors, many of which seem to act sex-specifically. We show that in response to nutrient intake, the enteroendocrine cells (EECs) of the adult Drosophila midgut release hormones that act via inter-organ relays to coordinate metabolism and feeding decisions. These findings suggest that crosstalk between the gut and other tissues regulates food choice according to metabolic needs, providing insight into how that intestine processes nutritional inputs and into the gut-derived signals that relay information regulating nutrient-specific hungers to maintain metabolic homeostasis.
Gut Feelings: The Microbiome as a Key Regulator of Brain & Behaviour Across the Lifespan
Inter-tissue signals modify food-seeking behavior in C. elegans
Animals modify their behavioral outputs in response to changes in external and internal environments. We use the nematode, C. elegans to probe the pathways linking changes in internal states like hunger with behavior. We find that acute food deprivation alters the localization of two transcription factors, likely releasing an insulin-like peptide from the intestine, which in turn modifies chemosensory neurons and alters behavior. These results present a model for how inter-tissue signals to generate flexible behaviors via gut-brain signaling.
Western diet consumption and memory impairment: what, when, and how?
Habitual consumption of a “Western diet”, containing higher than recommended levels of simple sugars and saturated fatty acids, is associated with cognitive impairments in humans and in various experimental animal models. Emerging findings reveal that the specific mnemonic processes that are disrupted by Western diet consumption are those that rely on the hippocampus, a brain region classically linked with memory control and more recently with the higher-order control of food intake. Our laboratory has established rat models in which excessive consumption of different components of a Western diet during the juvenile and adolescent periods of development yields long-term impairments in hippocampal-dependent memory function without concomitant increases in total caloric intake, body weight, or adiposity. Our ongoing work is investigating alterations in the gut microbiome as a potential underlying neurobiological mechanism linking early life unhealthy dietary factors to adverse neurocognitive outcomes.
Neural Circuit Dysfunction along the Gut/Brain Axis in zebrafish models of Autism Spectrum Disorder
Plasticity in gut microbe-host interactions
Plasticity in gut microbe-host interactions
Role of the gut microbiota in the development of alcohol use disorder
The gut microbiota is composed of a very large number of bacteria, viruses, fungi and yeasts that play an important role in the body, through the production of a series of metabolites (including neurotransmitters), and through an essential role in the barrier function of the gut and the regulation of immunity and stress response. In this lecture I will present, based mainly on human studies but also on preclinical studies, the evidence for a role of the gut microbiota in the development of alcohol use disorder. I will show the first results of trials to test the effects of nutritional approaches to address these deficits.
Adapt or Die: Transgenerational Inheritance of Pathogen Avoidance (or, How getting food poisoning might save your species)
Caenorhabditis elegans must distinguish pathogens from nutritious food sources among the many bacteria to which it is exposed in its environment1. Here we show that a single exposure to purified small RNAs isolated from pathogenic Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA14) is sufficient to induce pathogen avoidance in the treated worms and in four subsequent generations of progeny. The RNA interference (RNAi) and PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathways, the germline and the ASI neuron are all required for avoidance behaviour induced by bacterial small RNAs, and for the transgenerational inheritance of this behaviour. A single P. aeruginosa non-coding RNA, P11, is both necessary and sufficient to convey learned avoidance of PA14, and its C. elegans target, maco-1, is required for avoidance. Our results suggest that this non-coding-RNA-dependent mechanism evolved to survey the microbial environment of the worm, use this information to make appropriate behavioural decisions and pass this information on to its progeny.
Gut-brain signaling as a driver of behavior and gene expression in a mouse model for autism spectrum disorder
In vitro bioelectronic models of the gut-brain axis
The human gut microbiome has emerged as a key player in the bidirectional communication of the gut-brain axis, affecting various aspects of homeostasis and pathophysiology. Until recently, the majority of studies that seek to explore the mechanisms underlying the microbiome-gut-brain axis cross-talk relied almost exclusively on animal models, and particularly gnotobiotic mice. Despite the great progress made with these models, various limitations, including ethical considerations and interspecies differences that limit the translatability of data to human systems, pushed researchers to seek for alternatives. Over the past decades, the field of in vitro modelling of tissues has experienced tremendous growth, thanks to advances in 3D cell biology, materials, science and bioengineering, pushing further the borders of our ability to more faithfully emulate the in vivo situation. Organ-on-chip technology and bioengineered tissues have emerged as highly promising alternatives to animal models for a wide range of applications. In this talk I’ll discuss our progress towards generating a complete platform of the human microbiota-gut-brain axis with integrated monitoring and sensing capabilities. Bringing together principles of materials science, tissue engineering, 3D cell biology and bioelectronics, we are building advanced models of the GI and the BBB /NVU, with real-time and label-free monitoring units adapted in the model architecture, towards a robust and more physiologically relevant human in vitro model, aiming to i) elucidate the role of microbiota in the gut-brain axis communication, ii) to study how diet and impaired microbiota profiles affect various (patho-)physiologies, and iii) to test personalised medicine approaches for disease modelling and drug testing.
How much gut needs the brain ? Gut microbiota-immune crosstalk in neuroinflammation
Gestational exposure to environmental toxins, infections, and stressors are epidemiologically linked to neurodevelopmental disorders
Gestational exposure to environmental toxins, infections, and stressors are epidemiologically linked to neurodevelopmental disorders with strong male-bias, such as autism spectrum disorder. We modeled some of these prenatal risk factors in mice, by co-exposing pregnant dams to an environmental pollutant and limited-resource stress, which robustly dysregulated the maternal immune system. Male but not female offspring displayed long-lasting behavioral abnormalities and alterations in the activity of brain networks encoding social interactions, along with disruptions of gut structure and microbiome composition. Cellularly, prenatal stressors impaired microglial synaptic pruning in males during early postnatal development. Precise inhibition of microglial phagocytosis during the same critical period mimicked the impact of prenatal stressors on the male-specific social deficits. Conversely, modifying the gut microbiome rescued the social and cellular deficits, indicating that environmental stressors alter neural circuit formation in males via impairing microglia function during development, perhaps via a gut-brain disruption.
Disinhibitory and neuromodulatory regulation of hippocampal synaptic plasticity
The CA1 pyramidal neurons are embedded in an intricate local circuitry that contains a variety of interneurons. The roles these interneurons play in the regulation of the excitatory synaptic plasticity remains largely understudied. Recent experiments showed that repeated cholinergic activation of 𝛼7 nACh receptors expressed in oriens-lacunosum-moleculare (OLM𝛼2) interneurons could induce LTP in SC-CA1 synapses. We used a biophysically realistic computational model to examine mechanistically how cholinergic activation of OLMa2 interneurons increases SC to CA1 transmission. Our results suggest that, when properly timed, activation of OLMa2 interneurons cancels the feedforward inhibition onto CA1 pyramidal cells by inhibiting fast-spiking interneurons that synapse on the same dendritic compartment as the SC, i.e., by disinhibiting the pyramidal cell dendritic compartment. Our work further describes the pairing of disinhibition with SC stimulation as a general mechanism for the induction of synaptic plasticity. We found that locally-reduced GABA release (disinhibition) paired with SC stimulation could lead to increased NMDAR activation and intracellular calcium concentration sufficient to upregulate AMPAR permeability and potentiate the excitatory synapse. Our work suggests that inhibitory synapses critically modulate excitatory neurotransmission and induction of plasticity at excitatory synapses. Our work also shows how cholinergic action on OLM interneurons, a mechanism whose disruption is associated with memory impairment, can down-regulate the GABAergic signaling into CA1 pyramidal cells and facilitate potentiation of the SC-CA1 synapse.
Microbiome and behaviour: Exploring underlying mechanisms
Environmental insults alter brain function and behaviour inboth rodents and people. One putative underlying mechanism that has receivedsubstantial attention recently is the gut microbiota, the ecosystem ofsymbiotic microorganisms that populate the intestinal tract, which is known toplay a role in brain health and function via the gut-brain axis. Two keyenvironmental insults known to affect both brain function and behaviour, andthe gut microbiome, are poor diet and psychological stress. While there isstrong evidence for interactions between the microbiome and host physiology inthe context of chronic stress, little is known about the role of the microbiomein the host response to acute stress. Determining the underlying mechanisms bywhich stress may provoke functional changes in the gut and brain is criticalfor developing therapeutics to alleviate adverse consequences of traumaticstress.
Dynamics of the mouse auditory cortex and the perception of sound
Communication between the brain and the gut: Learnings from C. elegans
Sleep and the gut
Sleep is generally associated with the brain but poor sleep impacts the entire body - many diseases are caused or exacerbated by sleep loss. Our work is uncovering ways in which sleep and the body interact. We found a special, two-way relationship between sleep and the gut: the gut is uniquely impacted by sleep loss, and it actively controls sleep quality. These findings could help us understand the origins of sleep as well as develop strategies to offset the negative consequences of inadequate sleep.
Gut Feelings: The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis Across the Lifespan
The microbiota-gut-brain axis is emerging as a research area of increasing interest for those investigating the biological and physiological basis of brain development and behaviour during early life, adolescence & ageing. The routes of communication between the gut and brain include the vagus nerve, the immune system, tryptophan metabolism, via the enteric nervous system or by way of microbial metabolites such as short chain fatty acids. Studies in animal models have shown that the development of an appropriate stress response is dependent on the microbiota. Developmentally, a variety of factors can impact the microbiota in early life including mode of birth delivery, antibiotic exposure, mode of nutritional provision, infection, stress as well as host genetics. Recently, the gut microbiota has been implicated in regulating the stress response, and social behaviour. Moreover, fundamental brain processes from adult hippocampal neurogenesis to myelination to microglia activation have been shown to be regulated by the microbiome. Further studies will focus on understanding the mechanisms underlying such brain effects and how they can be exploited by microbiota-targeted interventions including ‘psychobiotics’ and diet
New Strategies and Approaches to Tackle and Understand Neurological Disorder
Broadly, the Mauro Costa-Mattioli laboratory (The MCM Lab) encompasses two complementary lines of research. The first one, more traditional but very important, aims at unraveling the molecular mechanisms underlying memory formation (e.g., using state-of-the-art molecular and cell-specific genetic approaches). Learning and memory disorders can strike the brain during development (e.g., Autism Spectrum Disorders and Down Syndrome), as well as during adulthood (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease). We are interested in understanding the specific circuits and molecular pathways that are primarily targeted in these disorders and how they can be restored. To tackle these questions, we use a multidisciplinary, convergent and cross-species approach that combines mouse and fly genetics, molecular biology, electrophysiology, stem cell biology, optogenetics and behavioral techniques. The second line of research, more recent and relatively unexplored, is focused on understanding how gut microbes control CNS driven-behavior and brain function. Our recent discoveries, that microbes in the gut could modulate brain function and behavior in a very powerful way, have added a whole new dimension to the classic view of how complex behaviors are controlled. The unexpected findings have opened new avenues of study for us and are currently driving my lab to answer a host of new and very interesting questions: - What are the gut microbes (and metabolites) that regulate CNS-driven behaviors? Would it be possible to develop an unbiased screening method to identify specific microbes that regulate different behaviors? - If this is the case, can we identify how members of the gut microbiome (and their metabolites) mechanistically influence brain function? - What is the communication channel between the gut microbiota and the brain? Do different gut microbes use different ways to interact with the brain? - Could disruption of the gut microbial ecology cause neurodevelopmental dysfunction? If so, what is the impact of disruption in young and adult animals? - More importantly, could specific restoration of selected bacterial strains (new generation probiotics) represent a novel therapeutic approach for the targeted treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders? - Finally, can we develop microbiota-directed therapeutic foods to repair brain dysfunction in a variety of neurological disorders?
Early constipation predicts faster dementia onset in Parkinson’s disease
Constipation is a common but not a universal feature in early PD, suggesting that gut involvement is heterogeneous and may be part of a distinct PD subtype with prognostic implications. We analysed data from the Parkinson’s Incidence Cohorts Collaboration, composed of incident community-based cohorts of PD patients assessed longitudinally over 8 years. Constipation was assessed with the MDS-UPDRS constipation item or a comparable categorical scale. Primary PD outcomes of interest were dementia, postural instability and death. PD patients were stratified according to constipation severity at diagnosis: none (n=313, 67.3%), minor (n=97, 20.9%) and major (n=55, 11.8%). Clinical progression to all 3 outcomes was more rapid in those with more severe constipation at baseline (Kaplan Meier survival analysis). Cox regression analysis, adjusting for relevant confounders, confirmed a significant relationship between constipation severity and progression to dementia, but not postural instability or death. Early constipation may predict an accelerated progression of neurodegenerative pathology. Conclusions: We show widespread cortical and subcortical grey matter micro-structure associations with schizophrenia PRS. Across all investigated phenotypes NDI, a measure of the density of myelinated axons and dendrites, showed the most robust associations with schizophrenia PRS. We interpret these results as indicative of reduced density of myelinated axons and dendritic arborization in large-scale cortico-subcortical networks mediating the genetic risk for schizophrenia.
Integration and unification in the science of consciousness
Despite undeniable progress in the science of consciousness, there is no consensus on even fundamental theoretical and empirical questions, such as whether ‘phenomenal consciousness’ is a scientifically respectable concept, whether phenomenal consciousness overflows access consciousness, or whether the neural correlates of perceptual consciousness are in the front or in the back of the cerebral cortex. Notably, disagreement also concerns proposed theories of consciousness. However, since not all theories are mutually incompatible, there have been attempts to make theoretical progress by integrating or unifying them. I shall argue that this is preferable over proposing yet another theory, but that one should not expect it to yield a complete theory of consciousness. Rather, theoretical work in consciousness research should focus on core hypotheses about consciousness that different theories of consciousness have in common. Such a ‘minimal unifying model’ of consciousness can then be used as a basis for formulating more specific hypotheses about consciousness.
Interactions between the microbiome and nervous system during early development
The gut microbiota is emerging as an important modulator of brain function and behavior, as several recent discoveries reveal substantial effects of the microbiome on neurophysiology, neuroimmunity and animal behavior. Despite these findings supporting a “microbiome-gut-brain axis”, the molecular and cellular mechanisms that underlie interactions between the gut microbiota and brain remain poorly understood. To uncover these, the Hsiao laboratory is mining the human microbiota for microbial modulators of host neuroactive molecules, investigating the impact of microbiota-immune system interactions on neurodevelopment and examining the microbiome as an interface between gene-environment interactions in neurological diseases. In particular, our research on effects of the maternal microbiome on offspring development in utero are revealing novel interactions between microbiome-dependent metabolites and fetal thalamocortical axonogenesis. Overall, we aim to dissect biological pathways for communication between the gut microbiota and nervous system, toward understanding fundamental interactions between physiological systems that impact brain and behavior.
A gut choice
Long-term effects of diet-induced obesity on gut-brain communication
Rapid communication between the gut and the brain about recently consumed nutrients is critical for regulating food intake and maintaining energy homeostasis. We have shown that the infusion of nutrients directly into the gastrointestinal tract rapidly inhibits hunger-promoting AgRP neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus and suppresses subsequent feeding. The mechanism of this inhibition appears to be dependent upon macronutrient content, and can be recapitulated by a several hormones secreted in the gut in response to nutrient ingestion. In high-fat diet-induced obese mice, the response of AgRP neurons to nutrient-related stimuli are broadly attenuated. This attenuation is largely irreversible following weight loss and may represent a mechanism underlying difficulty with weight loss and propensity for weight regain in obesity.
What can the gut nervous system tell us about our brain?
Modulation of C. elegans behavior by gut microbes
We are interested in understanding how microbes impact the behavior of host animals. Animal nervous systems likely evolved in environments richly surrounded by microbes, yet the impact of bacteria on nervous system function has been relatively under-studied. A challenge has been to identify systems in which both host and microbe are amenable to genetic manipulation, and which enable high-throughput behavioral screening in response to defined and naturalistic conditions. To accomplish these goals, we use an animal host — the roundworm C. elegans, which feeds on bacteria — in combination with its natural gut microbiome to identify inter-organismal signals driving host-microbe interactions and decision-making. C. elegans has some of the most extensive molecular, neurobiological and genetic tools of any multicellular eukaryote, and, coupled with the ease of gnotobiotic culture in these worms, represents a highly attractive system in which to study microbial influence on host behavior. Using this system, we discovered that commensal bacterial metabolites directly modulate nervous system function of their host. Beneficial gut microbes of the genus Providencia produce the neuromodulator tyramine in the C. elegans intestine. Using a combination of behavioral analysis, neurogenetics, metabolomics and bacterial genetics we established that bacterially produced tyramine is converted to octopamine in C. elegans, which acts directly in sensory neurons to reduce odor aversion and increase sensory preference for Providencia. We think that this type of sensory modulation may increase association of C. elegans with these microbes, increasing availability of this nutrient-rich food source for the worm and its progeny, while facilitating dispersal of the bacteria.
Untitled Seminar
Neuro-immune interactions in pain and host defense
The Chiu laboratory focuses on neuro-immune interactions in pain, itch, and tissue inflammation. Dr. Chiu’s research has uncovered molecular interactions between the nervous system, the immune system and microbes that modulates host defense. He has found that sensory neurons can directly detect bacterial pathogens and their toxins to produce pain. Neurons in turn release neuropeptides that modulate immune cells in host defense. These interactions occur at major tissue barriers in the body including the gut, skin and lungs. In this talk, he will discuss these major neuro-immune interactions and how understanding them could lead to novel approaches to treat pain or inflammation.
Sex, guts and babies: the plasticity of the adult intestine and its neurons
Internal organs constantly exchange signals, and can respond with striking anatomical and functional transformations, even in fully developed organisms. We are exploring the mechanisms that drive and sustain such plasticity using the intestine and its neurons as experimental systems. I will present some of our recent work, which has characterised the enteric nervous system of Drosophila, and has explored its physiological plasticity as well as that of the intestine itself. This work has uncovered unexpected sexual dimorphisms, intestinal contributions to reproductive success and metabolic crosstalk between the gut and the brain. Interestingly, this crosstalk appears to be spatially constrained by the three dimensional arrangement of viscera, revealing a previously unrecognised layer of inter-organ signalling regulation. I may also describe our attempts to explore how broadly applicable our findings may be using mammalian systems.
Food Mind Control: Regulation of Sensory Behaviors by Gut-Brain Signaling
How does the presence or absence of food shape and prioritize behavioral decisions? When is food more than just food? As in other animals, prolonged food deprivation dramatically alters sensory behaviors in C. elegans. For instance, it has been known since the mid-1970s that hungry worms no longer respond to temperature changes in their environment, but the underlying mechanisms have been unclear. I will describe unpublished work showing that insulin signaling from the gut regulates thermosensory behaviors as a function of feeding state by engaging a modulatory sensorimotor circuit that gates the output of the core thermosensory network. C. elegans is associated with, and consumes, diverse bacteria in the wild. I will also discuss a recent story in which we find that in addition to providing nutrition, a bacterial strain in the worm gut alters the hosts’ olfactory behavior and drives food choice decisions by producing a neurotransmitter that targets the hosts’ sensory neurons. These results add to our growing body of knowledge of how signaling from the gut modulates peripheral and central neuron properties and drives sensory behavioral plasticity.
Vision in dynamically changing environments
Many visual systems can process information in dynamically changing environments. In general, visual perception scales with changes in the visual stimulus, or contrast, irrespective of background illumination. This is achieved by adaptation. However, visual perception is challenged when adaptation is not fast enough to deal with sudden changes in overall illumination, for example when gaze follows a moving object from bright sunlight into a shaded area. We have recently shown that the visual system of the fly found a solution by propagating a corrective luminance-sensitive signal to higher processing stages. Using in vivo two-photon imaging and behavioural analyses we showed that distinct OFF-pathway inputs encode contrast and luminance. The luminance-sensitive pathway is particularly required when processing visual motion in contextual dim light, when pure contrast sensitivity underestimates the salience of a stimulus. Recent work in the lab has addressed the question how two visual pathways obtain such fundamentally different sensitivities, given common photoreceptor input. We are furthermore currently working out the network-based strategies by which luminance- and contrast-sensitive signals are combined to guide appropriate visual behaviour. Together, I will discuss the molecular, cellular, and circuit mechanisms that ensure contrast computation, and therefore robust vision, in fast changing visual scenes.
Brain size, gut size and cognitive abilities: experimental evolution of energy trade-offs
Depletion of Gut Microbiome and Exposure to Repeat Mild Traumatic Brain Injuries Modifies Social Behaviour and Neuropathological Changes Within the Adolescent Brain
Depression-Induced Early Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease is Associated with Gut Microbiota in Mice
Effect of gut microbiota from children with autism spectrum disorder on behavior and ASD-related biological markers in germ-free mice
Effects of early-life sodium butyrate supplementation on autism-like behavioral phenotype, neuroinflammatory profile and gut microbiota alterations induced by maternal immune activation in mouse offspring
Exploring the gut-microbiota-brain axis in a Spanish population in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic
Glymphatic system modelled as part of a gut-brain axis on-a-chip platform to study brain fluids clearance in neuroinflammation
A new gut-brain communication pathway in which bacterial sensing via neuronal Nod2 regulates appetite and body temperature
A Gut-Brain Connection: Gut Microbiome Composition is Differentially Altered After Repetitive Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Adolescent and Adult Rats
Gut-derived metabolites as modulators of brain inflammation
Human iPSC-based millifluidic model of the BBB/brain as part of the Microbiota-Gut-Brain axis MINERVA platform
Impact of the gut microbiota on nicotine effects and glia within the reward system in mice
The Interplay of Lipopolysaccharide and Alpha-Synuclein to Model Gut-Brain Pathophysiology in Parkinson´s Disease
Intersectional genetic targeting of distinct sensory neuron populations for functional analysis of gut-brain communication
Gut microbiome depletion leads to altered neural dynamics and metabolism in the dorsal CA1 field of the hippocampus
Gut microbiota from autistic children induce changes in the central nervous system of healthy mice
Gut microbiota – hippocampus synergisms in non-clinical subjects with high positive schizotypy
The gut microbiota regulates the catecholamine biosynthetic pathway in the adrenal glands of stressed rats
Modulation of gut microbiota by antibiotics did not affect anhedonia in a high-fat diet-induced model of depression in male mice
The neuroprotective effect promoted by the supplementation with spray-dried porcine plasma involves the microbiota-gut-brain axis
Population-Level Links between Schizophrenia and the Gut Microbiome
Social isolation in adolescence: changes in the gut microbiota composition and in the hippocampal inflammation
Studies on Hippocampal Histoarchitecture and Neurochemistry in Psychologically Stressed Rats Given Gut Microbiome Supplementation
Targeting the gut microbiota for possible biomarkers in Alzheimer’s disease
Unravelling the role of gut-brain metabolic interactions in aging-associated spatial memory decline
Validation of an innovative millifluidic gut-on-a-chip to challenge the microbiota-gut-brain axis in vitro
AAV-mediated overexpression of wild-type human alpha-synuclein leads to alterations in gut microbiota in a ‘brain-first’ rat model of prodromal Parkinson’s disease
FENS Forum 2024
Acute stress, microbial metabolites and the microbiota-gut-brain axis: Focus on microbial regulation of barrier function and hippocampal plasticity
FENS Forum 2024
Administration of Enterococcus faecium L-3 reduces disease severity in EAE model in rats by modulating microbiota composition, gut micromorphology, and immune function
FENS Forum 2024
Ameliorative effects of Enterococcus faecium on the gut-brain axis in Parkinson's disease
FENS Forum 2024
APOE genotype effects on the human gut microbiome
FENS Forum 2024
Gut bacterial toxin further enhances blood-brain barrier alterations in a progressive mouse model of Parkinson’s disease
FENS Forum 2024
The brain-gut axis in Alzheimer’s disease: Insights into a new clearance mechanism of amyloid beta peptide and tau protein
FENS Forum 2024
Entorhinal cortex as a hub in the gut microbiome–brain axis
FENS Forum 2024
Exploration of interventions that modulate stroke via gut-brain axis: A meta-analysis
FENS Forum 2024
Extracellular vesicles from mesenchymal stem cells alter gut microbiota and improve neuroinflammation and motor impairment in rats with mild liver damage
FENS Forum 2024
Functional mapping of brain pathways involved in the gut microbial modulation of social behaviour
FENS Forum 2024
The gut-brain axis in an animal model of schizophrenia
FENS Forum 2024
The gut-brain vagal axis governs mesolimbic natural and recreational reward dynamics
FENS Forum 2024
Happy Brain – Happy Bacteria? The effect of electroconvulsive therapy on gut bacteria
FENS Forum 2024
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