Lactobacillaceae-mediated eye-brain-gut axis regulates high myopia-related anxiety: from the perspective of predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine.

IF 6 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL The EPMA journal Pub Date : 2024-11-26 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1007/s13167-024-00387-z
Yuze Mi, Ke Chen, Shaokai Lin, Luyao Tong, Jiawei Zhou, Minghui Wan
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Abstract

Background: High myopia has become a major cause of blindness worldwide and can contribute to emotional deficits through its impact on the central nervous system. The potential crosstalk with gut microbiome positions high myopia as a valuable model for studying the eye-brain-gut axis, highlighting the intricate interplay between visual health, neurological function, and the gut microbiome. Understanding these connections is crucial from a predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine (PPPM) perspective, as it may reveal novel intervention targets for managing both visual and mental health.

Working hypothesis and methodology: In our study, we hypothesized that visual stimuli associated with high myopia may lead to gut microecological dysregulation, potentially triggering mood disorders such as anxiety and depression. To test this hypothesis, we assessed genetic associations between high myopia (N = 50,372) and depression (N = 674,452) as well as anxiety (N = 21,761) using inverse variance weighted as the primary analytical method. We also investigated the potential mediating role of the gut microbiome (N = 18,340). The findings were validated in an independent cohort and summarized through meta-analysis.

Results: A genetic causal relationship between high myopia and anxiety was found (odds ratio [OR] = 8.76; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.69-28.54; p = 3.16 × 10-4), with 20.3% of the effect mediated by the gut microbiome family Lactobacillaceae (β = 0.517; 95% CI, 0.104-1.090; p = 0.037). The analysis also showed a suggestive causal relationship between high myopia and depression (OR = 1.25; 95% CI, 1.00-1.57; p = 0.048).

Conclusions: Our study shows that high myopia causes anxiety via the Lactobacillaceae family of the gut microbiome, supporting the eye-brain-gut axis concept. This underscores the need to shift from reactive to predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine (PPPM). Targeting Lactobacillaceae offers novel insights for early intervention and personalized treatment of high myopia-related anxiety and sheds light on interventions for other vision-related brain disorders.

Graphical abstract:

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13167-024-00387-z.

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乳酸菌介导的眼-脑-肠轴调节高度近视相关焦虑:从预测、预防和个性化医学的角度
背景:高度近视已成为世界范围内失明的主要原因,并可通过影响中枢神经系统导致情绪缺陷。高度近视与肠道微生物群的潜在相互作用使其成为研究眼-脑-肠轴的一个有价值的模型,突出了视觉健康、神经功能和肠道微生物群之间复杂的相互作用。从预测、预防和个性化医学(PPPM)的角度来看,理解这些联系是至关重要的,因为它可能为管理视觉和心理健康揭示新的干预目标。工作假设和方法:在我们的研究中,我们假设与高度近视相关的视觉刺激可能导致肠道微生态失调,潜在地引发焦虑和抑郁等情绪障碍。为了验证这一假设,我们使用反方差加权作为主要分析方法,评估了高度近视(N = 50,372)与抑郁(N = 674,452)以及焦虑(N = 21,761)之间的遗传关联。我们还研究了肠道微生物组的潜在介导作用(N = 18,340)。研究结果在一个独立的队列中得到验证,并通过荟萃分析进行总结。结果:高度近视与焦虑存在遗传因果关系(优势比[OR] = 8.76;95%置信区间[CI], 2.69-28.54;p = 3.16 × 10-4),其中20.3%的效果由肠道菌群家族乳酸杆菌科介导(β = 0.517;95% ci, 0.104-1.090;p = 0.037)。分析还显示高度近视与抑郁之间存在暗示的因果关系(OR = 1.25;95% ci, 1.00-1.57;p = 0.048)。结论:我们的研究表明,高度近视通过肠道微生物群中的乳酸杆菌科家族引起焦虑,支持眼-脑-肠轴的概念。这凸显了从被动医疗向预测、预防和个性化医疗(PPPM)转变的必要性。靶向乳酸杆菌科为高度近视相关焦虑的早期干预和个性化治疗提供了新的见解,并为其他视觉相关脑疾病的干预提供了启示。图片摘要:补充资料:在线版本包含补充资料,网址为10.1007/s13167-024-00387-z。
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