| Literature DB >> 28111624 |
Vijayakumar Praveen1, Shama Praveen2.
Abstract
Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) continues to be a major public health issue. Following its major decline since the "Back to Sleep" campaign, the incidence of SIDS has plateaued, with an annual incidence of about 1,500 SIDS-related deaths in the United States and thousands more throughout the world. The etiology of SIDS, the major cause of postneonatal mortality in the western world, is still poorly understood. Although sleeping in prone position is a major risk factor, SIDS continues to occur even in the supine sleeping position. The triple-risk model of Filiano and Kinney emphasizes the interaction between a susceptible infant during a critical developmental period and stressor/s in the pathogenesis of SIDS. Recent evidence ranges from dysregulated autonomic control to findings of altered neurochemistry, especially the serotonergic system that plays an important role in brainstem cardiorespiratory/thermoregulatory centers. Brainstem serotonin (5-HT) and tryptophan hydroxylase-2 (TPH-2) levels have been shown to be lower in SIDS, supporting the evidence that defects in the medullary serotonergic system play a significant role in SIDS. Pathogenic bacteria and their enterotoxins have been associated with SIDS, although no direct evidence has been established. We present a new hypothesis that the infant's gut microbiome, and/or its metabolites, by its direct effects on the gut enterochromaffin cells, stimulates the afferent gut vagal endings by releasing serotonin (paracrine effect), optimizing autoresuscitation by modulating brainstem 5-HT levels through the microbiome-gut-brain axis, thus playing a significant role in SIDS during the critical period of gut flora development and vulnerability to SIDS. The shared similarities between various risk factors for SIDS and their relationship with the infant gut microbiome support our hypothesis. Comprehensive gut-microbiome studies are required to test our hypothesis.Entities:
Keywords: 5-HT; SIDS; autoresuscitation; gut flora; gut–brain axis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28111624 PMCID: PMC5216028 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2016.00136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1New sudden infant death syndrome hypothesis pathway: effect on infant gut flora on brainstem serotonin homeostasis and autoresuscitation .
Animal studies showing effect of gut microbiome/probiotics on the central nervous system (CNS).
| Reference | Study characteristics |
|---|---|
| 1. Sudo et al. ( | Participants: mice study, |
| Intervention: stress protocol | |
| Controls: specific pathogen-free (SPF) BALBc mice, gnotobiotic mice | |
| Primary outcome: plasma ACTH, corticosterone levels, fecal microflora analysis, plasma cytokine assays | |
| Conclusion: plasma ACTH and corticosterone responses of GF mice were more susceptible to stress than those of SPF mice. Gut flora regulates the development of the HPA stress response | |
| 2. Bravo et al. ( | Participants: adult male BALB/c mice, |
| Intervention: | |
| Control: control broth | |
| Type of probiotic: | |
| Primary outcome: corticosterone level, behavioral analysis, GABA B1b mRNA expression in hippocampus, amygdala, and locus coeruleus | |
| Conclusion: | |
| 3. Desbonnet et al. ( | Participants: adult Sprauge-Dawley rats ( |
| Intervention: | |
| Controls: | |
| Type of probiotic: | |
| Primary outcome: corticosterone level, tryptophan and IFN-g, TNF-alpha and IL-6, brain monoamines analysis | |
| Conclusion: attenuation of pro-inflammatory immune responses and the elevation of the serotonergic precursor, tryptophan, in probiotic-treated group | |
| 4. Alenina et al. ( | Participants: |
| Intervention: gene targeting leading to mice with absent TPH2, | |
| Type of probiotic: none | |
| Controls: | |
| Primary outcome: serotonin in the brain of Tph2−/− mice | |
| Conclusion: the lack of central serotonin in these mice leads to impaired early postnatal growth and altered autonomic control of sleep, thermoregulation, and cardiorespiratory reflexes | |
| 5. Lyte et al. ( | Participants: 9-week-old CF-1 male mice, |
| Intervention: in an animal model of IBD, infection with | |
| Controls: saline | |
| Type of probiotic: none | |
| Primary outcome: tested for anxiety-like behavior measurement, immune cytokine analysis, and colon for histological analysis | |
| Conclusion: | |
| 6. Gareau et al. ( | Participants: mouse |
| Intervention: behavior was assessed following infection with the non-invasive enteric pathogen, | |
| Primary outcome: whether daily treatment with probiotics normalized behavior was assessed | |
| Conclusion: memory dysfunction occurred in infected mice exposed to acute stress, while in the GF setting, memory was altered at baseline | |
| 7. McVey Neufeld et al. ( | Participants: mouse |
| Intervention: segments of jejunum from 8- to 12-week old GF, SPF, and CONV-GF mice dissected to expose myenteric plexus. Intracellular recordings by impaling cells with sharp microelectrodes | |
| Type of probiotic: none | |
| Primary outcome: action potential shapes, firing thresholds, the number of APs fired at 2× threshold, and passive membrane characteristics were measured | |
| Conclusion: commensal intestinal microbiota are essential for normal excitability of gut sensory neurons. When the vagus nerve is severed, effects of gut bacteria on brain biochemistry, stress response, and behavior disappear | |
| 8. Heijtz et al. ( | Participants: mouse |
| Intervention: motor activity and anxiety-like behavior measured | |
| Conclusion: unstressed GF mice were more active and willing to explore exposed areas of a maze than mice that had normal gut microbiota. Transplanting normal gut bacteria into the GF mice erased those behavioral differences only in early life, suggesting that there is a critical window for gut bacteria to establish normal patterns of behavior | |
| 9. Clarke et al. ( | Participants: male GF animals compared with conventionally colonized control animals |
| Intervention: measurement of 5-HT in hippocampus | |
| Male GF animals have a sex-specific significant elevation in hippocampal 5-HT and 5-HIAA compared with conventionally colonized control animals. Concentrations of tryptophan, the precursor of serotonin, are increased in the plasma of male GF animals, suggesting a humoral route through which the microbiota can influence CNS serotonergic neurotransmission | |
| Conclusion: microbiome–gut–brain axis in early life modulate hippocampal serotonin levels in a gender-dependent manner |