| Literature DB >> 22162969 |
Sue Grenham1, Gerard Clarke, John F Cryan, Timothy G Dinan.
Abstract
Bidirectional signalling between the gastrointestinal tract and the brain is regulated at neural, hormonal, and immunological levels. This construct is known as the brain-gut axis and is vital for maintaining homeostasis. Bacterial colonization of the intestine plays a major role in the post-natal development and maturation of the immune and endocrine systems. These processes are key factors underpinning central nervous system (CNS) signaling. Recent research advances have seen a tremendous improvement in our understanding of the scale, diversity, and importance of the gut microbiome. This has been reflected in the form of a revised nomenclature to the more inclusive brain-gut-enteric microbiota axis and a sustained research effort to establish how communication along this axis contributes to both normal and pathological conditions. In this review, we will briefly discuss the critical components of this axis and the methodological challenges that have been presented in attempts to define what constitutes a normal microbiota and chart its temporal development. Emphasis is placed on the new research narrative that confirms the critical influence of the microbiota on mood and behavior. Mechanistic insights are provided with examples of both neural and humoral routes through which these effects can be mediated. The evidence supporting a role for the enteric flora in brain-gut axis disorders is explored with the spotlight on the clinical relevance for irritable bowel syndrome, a stress-related functional gastrointestinal disorder. We also critically evaluate the therapeutic opportunities arising from this research and consider in particular whether targeting the microbiome might represent a valid strategy for the management of CNS disorders and ponder the pitfalls inherent in such an approach. Despite the considerable challenges that lie ahead, this is an exciting area of research and one that is destined to remain the center of focus for some time to come.Entities:
Keywords: central nervous system; dysbiosis; enteric nervous system; inflammation; irritable bowel syndrome; microbiota; probiotic; vagus nerve
Year: 2011 PMID: 22162969 PMCID: PMC3232439 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2011.00094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Development of the microbiome in early life. Subsequent to the sterile uterine environment, colonization begins at birth with facultative bacteria (blue) colonizing the GIT immediately. The anaerobic bacteria colonize later (orange). By 1 year of age the microbiome has a stable adult-like signature. Rodents follow a similar colonization pattern to humans and this forms the rationale for the use of germ free animals to study the impact of the microbiota.
Figure 2Function of the intestinal microbiome. Commensal bacteria exert a miscellany of protective, structural, and metabolic effects on the intestinal mucosa.
Figure 3Proposed mechanisms of action. There are a variety of proposed mechanisms, including both humoral and neural routes, through which the microbiota can modulate signaling along the brain–gut axis. For example, recent studies suggest a role for both the vagus nerve and modulation of systemic tryptophan levels in relaying the influence of both resident and exogenous microflora along this bidirectional communication axis.
Figure 4Brain–gut–microbe communication in health and disease. A stable gut microbiota is essential for normal gut physiology and contributes to appropriate signaling along the brain–gut axis and to the healthy status of the individual as shown on the left hand side of the diagram. Conversely, as shown on the right hand side of the diagram, intestinal dysbiosis can adversely influence gut physiology leading to inappropriate brain–gut axis signaling and associated consequences for CNS functions and disease states. Stress at the level of the CNS can also impact on gut function and lead to perturbations of the microbiota.
Studies which have shown altered fecal and mucosal microbiome in disease states.
| Group | Method, | Diagnostic criteria and subjects | Finding | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBS | Q-PCR, | Rome II, | ↓ | Malinen et al. ( | |
| BS-D ( | ↑ | ||||
| Culture/DGGE, | Rome II, | Increased number of aerobes in IBS patients | Mättö et al. ( | ||
| BS-D ( | Temporal instability in IBS patients revealed by DGGE | ||||
| Q-PCR, Phylogenic Microarray, | Rome II, | ↑ Ratio of the | Rajilic-Stojanovic et al., | ||
| ↑ in numbers of | |||||
| ↓ | |||||
| ↓ | |||||
| ↓ Average number of methanogens in IBS | |||||
| Fractionation/16S rRNA gene cloning and sequencing, Q-PCR, | Rome II, | Significant differences in | Kassinen et al. ( | ||
| IBS-D ( | |||||
| DGGE, | Rome II, | Significant difference between IBS and healthy controls | Codling et al. ( | ||
| No sub-typing | Significantly more variation in microbiota of healthy volunteers than that of IBS patients | ||||
| FISH, | Rome II, | ↓ | Kerckhoffs et al. ( | ||
| IBS-D ( | |||||
| Q-PCR, | Rome II and III, | ↑ | Tana et al. ( | ||
| IBS-D ( | |||||
| IBD | FISH adapted to flow cytometry, | Active CD ( | Sokol et al. ( | ||
| Active UC ( | |||||
| IC ( | |||||
| 16S rRNA DGGE analysis, | Active CD ( | ↓ Temporal stability of dominant species for all Crohn’s disease patients | Scanlan et al. ( | ||
| DGGE, Q-PCR, | CD ( | CD vs. unaffected relatives | Joossens et al. ( | ||
| ↓ | |||||
| ↑ | |||||
| Unaffected relatives vs. HS | |||||
| ↓ | |||||
| ↑ | |||||
| T-RFLP analysis16S rRNA gene, Q-PCR, | Monozygotic twin pairs that were discordant ( | Predominantly ileal CD vs. co-twins and CD localized in the colon | Willing et al. ( | ||
| ↓ | |||||
| ↑ | |||||
| 16S rRNA gene sequencing, | Inflamed and non-inflamed intestinal tissue from 6 CD ( | ↓ Mucosal microbial diversity in IBD | Walker et al. ( | ||
| ↓ | |||||
| ↑ | |||||
| rRNA sequence analysis and Q-PCR | UC ( | ↓ | Frank et al. ( | ||
| HS ( | ↑ | ||||
| Obesity | Pyrosequencing, | Ob/Ob mice | ↑ Firmicutes | Turnbaugh et al. ( | |
| ↓ Firmicute to | |||||
| 16S rRNA sequencing, | Ob/Ob mice | ↓ | Ley et al. ( | ||
| ↑ | |||||
| 16S rRNA sequencing | Human | ↓ | Ley et al. ( | ||
| ↑ | |||||
| Q-PCR, MALDI-TOF spectral analysis, | Human | Million et al. ( | |||
| Autism | Q-PCR, | Autistic ( | ↑ | Song et al. ( | |
| ↓ | |||||
| 16S rRNA gene sequencing and culture, | Autistic ( | Fecal samples | Finegold et al. ( | ||
| Children with autism had nine species of | |||||
| Control children had three species of | |||||
| No non-spore-forming anaerobes and microaerophilic bacteria from controls significant numbers of non-spore-forming anaerobes and microaerophilic bacteria in children with autism | |||||
| Pyrosequencing, | Autistic ( | ↑ Increased diversity and richness in the autistic gastrointestinal microbiome | Finegold et al. ( | ||
| ↑ | |||||
| ↑ | |||||
| ↑ | |||||
IBS-D, diarrhea predominant IBS; IBS-C, constipation predominant IBS; IBS-A, alternating IBS; UC, ulcerative colitis; CD, Crohn’s disease; IC, infectious colitis; HS, healthy subjects; DGGE, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis; Q-PCR, quantitative PCR; FISH, fluorescent .