| Literature DB >> 29291606 |
Arun T Nair1, Vadivelan Ramachandran1, Nanjan M Joghee2, Shanish Antony3, Gopalakrishnan Ramalingam1.
Abstract
Recent investigations suggest that gut microbiota affects the brain activity through the microbiota-gut-brain axis under both physiological and pathological disease conditions like Parkinson's disease. Further dopamine synthesis in the brain is induced by dopamine producing enzymes that are controlled by gut microbiota via the microbiota-gut-brain axis. Also alpha synuclein deposition and the associated neurodegeneration in the enteric nervous system that increase intestinal permeability, oxidative stress, and local inflammation, accounts for constipation in Parkinson's disease patients. The trigger that causes blood brain barrier leakage, immune cell activation and inflammation, and ultimately neuroinflammation in the central nervous system is believed to be due to the chronic low-grade inflammation in the gut. The non-motor symptoms that appear years before motor symptoms could be reliable early biomarkers, if they could be correlated with the established and reliable neuroimaging techniques or behavioral indices. The future directions should therefore, focus on the exploration of newer investigational techniques to identify these reliable early biomarkers and define the specific gut microbes that contribute to the development of Parkinson's disease. This ultimately should pave the way to safer and novel therapeutic approaches that avoid the complications of the drugs delivered today to the brain of Parkinson's disease patients.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Constipation; Gastrointestinal microbiome; Humans alpha synuclein; Parkinson disease
Year: 2018 PMID: 29291606 PMCID: PMC5753901 DOI: 10.5056/jnm17105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurogastroenterol Motil ISSN: 2093-0879 Impact factor: 4.924
Characteristics of Presymptomatic Stage Biomarkers in Parkinson’s Disease (Adapted From Picillo et al17)
| Presymptomatic biomarker type | Subtype | Identifiable characteristics. |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical biomarkers | NMS (appear10 years before motor symptoms) | Constipation, dream enacting behavior, frequent nightmares, excessive daytime sleepiness, post prandial fullness, tremor |
| NMS (appear between 2–10 years before motor symptoms) | Smell loss, mood disturbances, excessive sweating, fatigue, pain, constipation, hypotension, urinary dysfunction, erectile dysfunction | |
| Biochemical biomarkers | Metabolic factors | Cholesterol level |
| Neurotrophic factors | High IGF-1 | |
| Low vitamin D | ||
| Oxidative stress | High uric acid level | |
| Imaging biomarkers | Nuclear imaging | Nigrostriatal degeneration |
| Transcranial sonography | Substantia nigra hyperechogenicity | |
| Magnetic resonance imaging | Reorganization of corticostriatal circuits in mutations |
NMS, non-motor symptoms; IGF, immunoglobulin F.
Early Clinical Manifestations of Parkinson’s Disease in Gut, Symptoms, and Etiology (Adapted From Mukherjee et al65,104)
| PD associated clinical manifestation in the gut | Symptoms | Etiology and test for evaluation |
|---|---|---|
| Malnutrition | Weight alteration, increased disease severity or duration, depression or anxiety, fatigue, osteoporosis | Loss of appetite, dysphagia, constipation, early satiety, increased dose of levodopa, vitamin D deficiency, impaired insulin signaling, mitochondrial dysfunction |
| Oral and dental disorders | Lesser teeth number, teeth caries, gingival recession, increased tooth mobility, burning mouth syndrome, bruxism, temporomandibular disorder, taste impairment | Low frequency tooth brushing, motor or impairment, apathy, depression, cognitive impairment |
| Sialorrhea | Drooling, dementia, hallucination, orthostatic hypotension, silent aspiration, laryngeal penetration of saliva | Dysphagia with less efficient swallowing, abnormal head posture, unintentional mouth opening due to hypomimia |
| Dysphagia | Aspiration pneumonia, dementia, depression, severe motor symptoms | Dysfunction of oral, pharyngeal and esophageal swallowing, central cholinergic dysfunction |
| Gastric dysfunction | Nausea, vomiting, early satiety, postprandial fullness | Response fluctuation with levodopa |
| Motor severity worsening in PD | Serology, urea breath test, serum antigen test | |
| Constipation and defecatory dysfunction | Infrequent bowel movements, failed defecation attempts, sense of incomplete rectal emptying at defecation | Slow transit constipation, dyssynergic defecation. |
PD, Parkinson’s disease; H. pylori, Helicobacter pylori.
FigureGut inflammation driven gastrointestinal dysfunction mediated Parkinson’s disease (PD) pathogenesis model. BBB, blood brain barrier. Adapted from Yarandi et al147 and Houser and Tansey.148
Difference in Fecal Gut Microbiota Composition in Parkinson’s Disease Patients Versus Age Matched Control (Adapted From Unger et al103)
| Bacterial family | Phylum | Change in microbial concentration in PD group compared to control |
|---|---|---|
| Prevotellacea | Bacteroidetes | Decrease |
| Firmicutes | Decrease | |
| Lactobacilli/Enterococci | Firmicutes | Decrease |
| Verrucomicrobia | Increase | |
| Actinobacteria | Increase | |
| Archaea | Increase | |
| Enterobacteriaceae | Proteobacteria | Increase |
PD, Parkinson’s disease.
Difference in Fecal Short Chain Fatty Acid Composition in Parkinson’s Disease Patients Compared to Age Matched Control (Adapted From Unger et al103)
| SCFA | Change in SCFA concentration in PD group compared to control |
|---|---|
| Acetate | Decrease |
| Butyrate | Decrease |
| Propionate | Decrease |
SCFA, short chain fatty acid; PD, Parkinson’s disease.