MEAL TIMING MODULATES COGNITIVE FUNCTION AND CIRCADIAN NEUROBIOLOGY VIA THE GUT MICROBIOTA: HUMAN EVIDENCE AND TRANSLATIONAL FINDINGS IN MURINE MODELS
Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Málaga y Plataforma en Nanomedicina, IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND
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PS05-09AM-540
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To determine whether microbial communities causally contribute to these neurobehavioral differences, fecal samples from each condition were transplanted into microbiota-depleted mice. Remarkably, mice receiving lTRE-derived microbiota exhibited better long-term memory performance, reduced anxiety-like behavior, and increased hypothalamic expression of the circadian genes Bmal1 and Clock, analyzed by RT-qPCR, suggesting more robust central circadian alignment. Microbiota profiling using QIIME2, DADA2, and ANCOM-BC, revealed that lTRE donors had higher abundances of bacterial genera associated with neuromodulatory metabolites (e.g., Lactobacillus, Oscillibacter, Phascolarctobacterium), potentially linking meal timing, microbial activity, and brain function.
Together, these findings indicate that the temporal structure of feeding can modulate cognition and circadian neurobiology via microbiota-dependent pathways, highlighting meal timing as a modifiable factor of the gut–brain axis.
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