| Literature DB >> 31588192 |
Lijuan Sun1,2, Haohao Zhang1, Ying Cao1, Chenchen Wang1, Changhai Zhao2, Huaning Wang3, Guangbin Cui4, Meixia Wang1, Yan Pan1, Yupeng Shi1, Yongzhan Nie1.
Abstract
Background: Accumulating evidence has shown that neuropsychiatric disorders are associated with gut microbiota through the gut-brain axis. However, the effects of antidepressant treatment on gut microbiota are rarely studied. Here, we investigated whether stress led to gut microbiota changes and whether fluoxetine plays a role in microbiota alteration.Entities:
Keywords: depression; fluoxetine; gut-brain axis; microbiota; stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31588192 PMCID: PMC6775263 DOI: 10.7150/ijms.37322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Med Sci ISSN: 1449-1907 Impact factor: 3.738
Figure 1Fluoxetine showed a significant antidepressant and mild anti-anxiety effects in CUMS mice. (A) Experimental design of the study. (B) Body weight was measured weekly in all groups during the 6 weeks of CUMS.*P < 0.05, control+PBSvs. CUMS+PBS group; △P<0.05, control+PBSvs.CUMS+fluoxetine, as measured by independent samples t-test. (C) SP at 1 h (F2,28=3.340, P=0.051), 4 h (F2,28=3.252, P=0.054), 16 h (F2,28=2.645, P=0.089), and 24 h (F2,28=4.928, P=0.015). (D) Time spent struggling and immobile in the TST (F2,28=8.572, P=0.001). (E) Time spent in all arms (F2,28=2.650, P=0.089) and in open arm in the EPM (F2,28=10.866, P<0.001). (F) Distance travelled (F2,28=1.299, P=0.289) and time spent in center in OFT (F2,28=0.768, P=0.523). Data are presented as mean ± S.E.M. Differences between the three groups were measured by one-way ANOVA. Time spent in arms and distance travelled are covariates for time spent in open arms and time in center respectively. *P < 0.05 **P < 0.01, between two groups, as measured by independent samples t-test. CUMS: chronic unpredictable mild stress; EPM: elevated plus maze; OFT: open-field test; SP: sucrose preference; TST: tail-suspension test.
Figure 2Fluoxetine ameliorated the altered composition, low bacterial diversity and simple bacterial network induced by CUMS. (A) Shannon diversity scores. (B) PCoA analysis plots of Bray-Curtis dissimilarity between groups. (C) Network analysis at the genus level. Networks are randomly colored by modules. V: number of nodes. E: number of edges.
Figure 3Fluoxetine remodeled stress-induced dysbiosis (directly and indirectly). (A) Lefse analysis of microbiomes between control+PBS and CUMS+PBS groups. (B) Lefse analysis of microbiomes and CUMS+PBS and CUMS+fluoxetine groups. (C) The bacterial network associated with depression and fluoxetine. Red dots: bacteria positively associated with depression-like behavior whose abundance was significantly increased in CUMS+PBS mice compared to Control+PBS; Blue dots: bacteria negatively associated with depression-like behavior whose abundance was significantly increased in CUMS+fluoxetine mice; Green dots: bacteria associated with depression and fluoxetine whose abundance was significantly increased in CUMS+PBS mice and decreased in CUMS+fluoxetine mice. Red line: positive correlation; grey line: negative correlation. (D) Heatmap of key OTUs. Red frame: OTUs affected by CUMS but not corrected by fluoxetine. Green frame: OTUs affected by CUMS and corrected by fluoxetine. Blue frame: OTUs not affected by CUMS but influenced by fluoxetine. CUMS: chronic unpredictable mild stress.
Figure 4Fluoxetine recovered depression-specific bacteria at the OTUs level. Altered composition of gut bacteria with different abundance at the OTUs level.
Figure 5Depression-specific bacterial genera were linked to anxiety- and depression-like behaviors. (A) Heatmap of Spearman's rank correlation coefficients between the behavioral indices and bacterial abundance between groups. (B) Correlation analysis between given bacteria and time course of SP. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.