| Literature DB >> 31609701 |
Sebastiaan P van Kessel1, Sahar El Aidy1.
Abstract
Increasing evidence is supporting the hypothesis of α-synuclein pathology spreading from the gut to the brain although the exact etiology of Parkinson's disease (PD) is unknown. Furthermore, it has been proposed that inflammation, via the gastrointestinal tract, potentially through infections, may contribute to α-synuclein pathogenesis, and thus to the risk of developing PD. Recently, many studies have shown that PD patients have an altered microbiota composition compared to healthy controls. Inflammation in the gut might drive microbiota alterations or vice versa. Many studies focused on the detection of biomarkers of the etiology, onset, or progression of PD however also report metabolites from bacterial origin. These metabolites might reflect the bacterial composition and as well play an important role in immune homeostasis, ultimately affecting the progression of PD. Besides the bacterial metabolites, pharmacological treatment of PD might play a crucial role during the progression and thus treatment of the disease on the immune system. This review aims to establish a link between the microbial composition with the observed alterations of bacterial metabolites and their impact on the immune system, which could have influential effect in onset, progression and etiology of PD.Entities:
Keywords: Microbiota composition; Parkinson’s disease; bacterial metabolites; dopamine; immune modulators; levodopa
Year: 2019 PMID: 31609701 PMCID: PMC6839483 DOI: 10.3233/JPD-191780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 1877-7171 Impact factor: 5.568
Bacterial composition alterations in PD patients compared to healthy controls
| Decreased | Increased | Method | PD | HC | Sample | Reference |
| 16S rRNA | 64 | 64 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 193 | 113 | Feces | [ | ||
| Shotgun metagenomics | 31 | 28 | Feces | [ | ||
| Targeted qPCR for 19 species | 45 | 32 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 212 | 136 | Feces | [ | ||
| none | 16S rRNA | 29 | 29 | Feces | [ | |
| 16S rRNA | 38 | 34 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 38 | 34 | Sigmoid mucosa | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 24 | 14 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 75 | 45 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 89 | 66 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 72 | 72 | Feces | [ | ||
| 16S rRNA | 45 | 45 | Feces | [ | ||
| Targeted qPCR for 9 taxa | 34 | 34 | Feces | [ |
Updated table adapted and merged from [25] and [26]; *Also significant after the two-year follow up; ns, not significant.
Bacterial metabolites significantly altered in PD patients compared to healthy controls
| Study | Sample | PD | Healthy | Method | Decreased (FC, PD vs HC) | Increased (FC, PD vs HC) | Description |
| [ | CSF | 34 | 35 | GC-MS | none | none | Lumbar puncture after fasting. |
| [ | CSF | 31 | 95 | FT-ICR-MS | none | Lumbar puncture; 18 patients without PD medications and 11 with PD medication. | |
| [ | CSF | 48 | 57 | GC/LC-MS | none | none | Postmortem (within 4 hours) collection of lateral ventricular CSF. |
| [ | CSF | 10 | 10 | 1D 1H-NMR | none | none | Six patients started dopaminergic treatment at the time of CSF collection. |
| [ | CSF, Plasma | 20 | 20 | GC-TOF-MS | none | none | PD baseline; Samples were collected without overnight fasting, between 8-9 AM. |
| [ | CSF, Plasma | 49* | NA | LC-GC-MS | Correlation with the progression of PD: Benzoic acid (CSF: | Correlation with the progression of PD: indoleacetic acid (CSF:0.29, plasma: ns) | *Placebo treated PD patients from study from 1989. Lumbar puncture for CSF samples and blood samples were collected after overnight bed rest (between 6 and 10 AM before breakfast). |
| [ | CSF, Plasma | 22 | 28 | GC/LC-MS | 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetic acid (NA) | indole (NA) | Lumbar puncture and plasma samples from non-fasting patients; Samples were age, sex, and sampling-date matched. |
| [ | CSF, Plasma | 26 | 14 | LC-MS | none | none | Lumbar punctures were performed between 09.30 and 10.00 am after overnight fasting; Blood was drawn from the cubital fossa immediately after the lumbar puncture. |
| [ | Plasma | 43 | 37 | 2D 1H-NMR | trimethylamine (NA), acetate (NA), threonate (NA) | none | Samples were obtained from drug-naïve PD patients with age and gender-matched healthy controls. |
| [ | Plasma | 53 | 46 | LC-ECA | none | none | 53 PD patients (41 iPD, 12 LRRK2G2019S) were compared to 31 healthy family members (21 positive and 10 negative for LRRK2 mutation) and 15 non-related controls. |
| [ | Serum | 35 | 7 | GC/LC-MS | indoleacetic acid (0.67) | phenyllactate (1.84); 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)lactate (1.23) | Blood was withdrawn after 4 hours of fasting. |
| [ | Serum | 41 | 40 | DiscoveryHD4TM Metabolon Platform | catechol sulfate (0.62) | none | Mass spectrometry-based; Blood was withdrawn after fasting from 41 idiopathic early-stage Parkinson’s patients (disease duration <1 year). |
| [ | Serum | 43 | 42 | CIT-LC-MS | none | vanillic acid (3.48) (mainly dietary source) | Determined of PD patients not developing dementia ( |
| [ | Serum | 28 | 18 | LC-MS | none | none | Blood was withdrawn in the morning before any food or drink. |
| [ | Serum | 6 | 19 | LC-MS | indoleacetic acid (0.82); hippuric acid (0.52); 3-hydroxyhippuric acid (0.39); catechol sulfate (0.62); 3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)propionic acid (0.49); indole-3-methyl acetate (0.70); 2-Furoylglycine (0.37) | none | PARK2 PD patients; Blood was withdrawn after overnight fasting. |
| [ | Serum | 48# | 10 | LC-MS | phenylethylamine (0.34d, 0.16e) | tyramine (1.70d, 2.44e) | #21 |
| [ | Serum | 80 | 20 | LC-FT-ICR-MS | none | none | 39 rapid progressing PD Patients and 41 slowly progressing PD patients. No fasting was required. No medication was allowed in the morning. Samples were taken at the morning exam between 8 AM and 12 PM |
| [ | Urine | 106 | 104 | LC-MS | none | 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetic acid (1.96–2.16); tryptamine (2.22–3.31); indoleacetic acid (1.66–3.23); phenylacetic acid (2.36–2.71) | After overnight fasting morning midstream urine samples were collected at week 0, 16 and 32. |
| [ | Urine | 92 | 65 | GC/LC-MS | none | 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetic acid (1.66a, 2.78b, 5.85c); indoleacetic acid (2.64a, 3.49b, 1.88c); aminobenzoic acid (6.63a, 25.43b, 16.74c); hydroxybenzoic acid (4.30a, 4.26b, 6.68c) | After overnight fasting morning midstream urine samples were collected at week 0, 16 and 32; aEarly-stage (HY 1–1.5), bMid-stage (HY 2–2.5), cAdvanced-stage (HY 3-4). |
| [ | Feces | 34 | 44$ | GC-MS | acetate (0.43f, 0.71g), butyrate (0.38f, 0.57g), propionate (0.48f, 0.61g) | none | $34 age matched controls and 10 young healthy controls. Fold changes derived from figure compared to young controlsg and age matched controlsf. All subjects were on an omnivorous diet without special dietary habits or restrictions. During the last 3 months no intake of antibiotics, probiotics, or prebiotics was reported. |
*Parkinson Study Group. Effect of deprenyl on the progression of disability in early Parkinson’s disease. N Engl J Med 1989;321:1364–1371. GC, gas chromatography; LC, liquid chromatography, MS, mass spectrometry; CIT, chemical isotope labeling; FT-ICR, Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance; NMR, nuclear magnetic resonance; LC-ECA, LC, electrochemical Array.