Chronic corticosterone exposure causes anxiety- and depression-related behaviors with altered gut microbial and brain metabolomic profiles in adult male C57BL/6J mice.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Molecular Brain Pub Date : 2024-11-07 DOI:10.1186/s13041-024-01146-x
Hirotaka Shoji, Yasuhiro Maeda, Tsuyoshi Miyakawa
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Abstract

Chronic exposure to glucocorticoids in response to long-term stress is thought to be a risk factor for major depression. Depression is associated with disturbances in the gut microbiota composition and peripheral and central energy metabolism. However, the relationship between chronic glucocorticoid exposure, the gut microbiota, and brain metabolism remains largely unknown. In this study, we first investigated the effects of chronic corticosterone exposure on various domains of behavior in adult male C57BL/6J mice treated with the glucocorticoid corticosterone to evaluate them as an animal model of depression. We then examined the gut microbial composition and brain and plasma metabolome in corticosterone-treated mice. Chronic corticosterone treatment resulted in reduced locomotor activity, increased anxiety-like and depression-related behaviors, decreased rotarod latency, reduced acoustic startle response, decreased social behavior, working memory deficits, impaired contextual fear memory, and enhanced cued fear memory. Chronic corticosterone treatment also altered the composition of gut microbiota, which has been reported to be associated with depression, such as increased abundance of Bifidobacterium, Turicibacter, and Corynebacterium and decreased abundance of Barnesiella. Metabolomic data revealed that long-term exposure to corticosterone led to a decrease in brain neurotransmitter metabolites, such as serotonin, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, acetylcholine, and gamma-aminobutyric acid, as well as changes in betaine and methionine metabolism, as indicated by decreased levels of adenosine, dimethylglycine, choline, and methionine in the brain. These results indicate that mice treated with corticosterone have good face and construct validity as an animal model for studying anxiety and depression with altered gut microbial composition and brain metabolism, offering new insights into the neurobiological basis of depression arising from gut-brain axis dysfunction caused by prolonged exposure to excessive glucocorticoids.

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慢性皮质酮暴露会导致成年雄性 C57BL/6J 小鼠出现焦虑和抑郁相关行为,并改变肠道微生物和大脑代谢组图谱。
长期暴露于糖皮质激素以应对长期压力被认为是重度抑郁症的一个风险因素。抑郁症与肠道微生物群组成以及外周和中枢能量代谢紊乱有关。然而,慢性糖皮质激素暴露、肠道微生物群和脑代谢之间的关系在很大程度上仍然未知。在本研究中,我们首先研究了长期暴露于皮质酮对成年雄性 C57BL/6J 小鼠各种行为领域的影响,并将其作为抑郁症的动物模型进行评估。然后,我们研究了皮质酮处理小鼠的肠道微生物组成以及大脑和血浆代谢组。慢性皮质酮治疗会导致小鼠运动活动减少、焦虑样和抑郁相关行为增加、旋转潜伏期缩短、声学惊吓反应减弱、社交行为减少、工作记忆缺陷、情境恐惧记忆受损以及诱导恐惧记忆增强。慢性皮质酮治疗还改变了肠道微生物群的组成,而据报道,肠道微生物群的组成与抑郁症有关,如双歧杆菌、Toricibacter和Corynebacterium的丰度增加和Barnesiella的丰度降低。代谢组学数据显示,长期暴露于皮质酮会导致大脑神经递质代谢物的减少,如血清素、5-羟基吲哚乙酸、乙酰胆碱和γ-氨基丁酸,以及甜菜碱和蛋氨酸代谢的变化,表现为大脑中腺苷、二甲基甘氨酸、胆碱和蛋氨酸水平的降低。这些结果表明,用皮质酮治疗的小鼠作为研究焦虑症和抑郁症的动物模型,在肠道微生物组成和脑代谢改变方面具有良好的面貌和构造有效性,为研究长期暴露于过量糖皮质激素导致的肠脑轴功能紊乱所引起的抑郁症的神经生物学基础提供了新的见解。
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来源期刊
Molecular Brain
Molecular Brain NEUROSCIENCES-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
97
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Molecular Brain is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers manuscripts on all aspects of studies on the nervous system at the molecular, cellular, and systems level providing a forum for scientists to communicate their findings. Molecular brain research is a rapidly expanding research field in which integrative approaches at the genetic, molecular, cellular and synaptic levels yield key information about the physiological and pathological brain. These studies involve the use of a wide range of modern techniques in molecular biology, genomics, proteomics, imaging and electrophysiology.
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