高海拔缺氧条件下,肠道菌群通过肠-脑轴介导小鼠记忆损伤。

Wenhao Li, Yuhao Wang, Yi Shi, Fenfen He, Zaihua Zhao, Jingchun Liu, Zhenbo Gao, Jianbin Zhang, Xuefeng Shen
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摘要

缺氧是高海拔地区的主要危险因素,有证据表明,高海拔缺氧会改变肠道微生物群,而肠道微生物群在记忆功能中起着至关重要的调节作用。然而,肠道微生物群与缺氧条件下记忆障碍之间的因果关系尚不清楚。在本研究中,我们采用高海拔缺氧模型结合粪便微生物群移植(FMT)的方法来探索小鼠肠道微生物群在缺氧环境下对记忆障碍的影响。我们观察到,高海拔缺氧暴露降低了短期和长期记忆以及海马体依赖的恐惧记忆能力,同时减少了liilactobacillus和Muribaculum的相对丰度。此外,缺氧条件增加了肠和血脑屏障的通透性。从缺氧暴露的小鼠到naïve抗生素治疗的小鼠,FMT导致类似的记忆障碍,脂乳杆菌和Muribaculum丰度的变化,以及肠/血脑屏障通透性的增加。相关分析显示,liilactobacillus和Muribaculum与海马体依赖性情境恐惧记忆之间存在显著正相关。同样地,Ligilactobacillus与短期记忆呈正相关。因此,liilactobacillus和Muribaculum可能是降低缺氧记忆能力的关键微生物,肠道和血脑屏障是其主要途径。我们的研究结果为高海拔环境下肠道菌群失调可能导致记忆障碍的潜在调节机制提供了进一步的证据。
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The gut microbiota mediates memory impairment under high-altitude hypoxia via the gut-brain axis in mice.

Hypoxia is a predominant risk factor at high altitudes, and evidence suggests that high-altitude hypoxia alters the gut microbiota, which plays an essential regulatory role in memory function. However, the causal relationship between the gut microbiota and memory impairment under hypoxic conditions remains unclear. In this study, we employed a high-altitude hypoxia model combined with fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) approach in mice to explore the effects of the gut microbiota on memory impairment in a hypoxic environment. We observed that high-altitude hypoxia exposure reduced short- and long-term memory and hippocampus-dependent fear memory abilities, along with decreased relative abundance of Ligilactobacillus and Muribaculum. Moreover, hypoxic conditions increased intestinal and blood-brain barrier permeability. FMT from hypoxia-exposed mice into naïve antibiotic-treated mice resulted in similar memory impairments, Ligilactobacillus and Muribaculum abundance changes, and increased intestinal/blood-brain barrier permeability. Correlation analysis showed a robust positive association between Ligilactobacillus and Muribaculum with hippocampus-dependent contextual fear memory. Likewise, Ligilactobacillus was positively correlated with short-term memory. Therefore, Ligilactobacillus and Muribaculum may be key microbes in reducing memory ability in hypoxia, with the intestinal and blood-brain barriers as primary pathways. Our findings provide further evidence for the potential regulatory mechanism by which gut microbiota dysbiosis may contribute to memory impairment in a high-altitude environment.

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