| Literature DB >> 29353471 |
Tianlu Chen1, Yijun You1, Guoxiang Xie2, Xiaojiao Zheng1, Aihua Zhao1, Jiajian Liu1, Qing Zhao1, Shouli Wang1, Fengjie Huang1, Cynthia Rajani2, Congcong Wang3, Shaoqiu Chen3, Yan Ni2, Herbert Yu2, Youping Deng4, Xiaoyan Wang3, Wei Jia1,2.
Abstract
There is increased appreciation for the diverse roles of the microbiome-gut-brain axis on mammalian growth and health throughout the lifespan. Numerous studies have demonstrated that the gut microbiome and their metabolites are extensively involved in the communication between brain and gut. Association study of brain metabolome and gut microbiome is an active field offering large amounts of information on the interaction of microbiome, brain and gut but data size and complicated hierarchical relationships were found to be major obstacles to the formation of significant, reproducible conclusions. This study addressed a two-level strategy of brain metabolome and gut microbiome association analysis of male Wistar rats in the process of growth, employing several analytical platforms and various bioinformatics methods. Trajectory analysis showed that the age-related brain metabolome and gut microbiome had similarity in overall alteration patterns. Four high taxonomical level correlated pairs of "metabolite type-bacterial phylum", including "lipids-Spirochaetes", "free fatty acids (FFAs)-Firmicutes", "bile acids (BAs)-Firmicutes", and "Neurotransmitters-Bacteroidetes", were screened out based on unit- and multivariant correlation analysis and function analysis. Four groups of specific "metabolite-bacterium" association pairs from within the above high level key pairs were further identified. The key correlation pairs were validated by an independent animal study. This two-level strategy is effective in identifying principal correlations in big data sets obtained from the systematic multiomics study, furthering our understanding on the lifelong connection between brain and gut.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29353471 DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b02859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Chem ISSN: 0003-2700 Impact factor: 6.986