| Literature DB >> 32117799 |
Walter J Lukiw1,2,3.
Abstract
The microbiome of the human gastrointestinal (GI)-tract is a rich and dynamic source of microorganisms that together possess a staggering complexity and diversity. Collectively these microbes are capable of secreting what are amongst the most neurotoxic and pro-inflammatory biopolymers known. These include lipopolysaccharide (LPS), enterotoxins, microbial-derived amyloids and small non-coding RNA (sncRNA). One of the major microbial species in the human GI-tract microbiome, about ~100-fold more abundant than Escherichia coli, is Bacteroides fragilis, an anaerobic, rod-shaped Gram-negative bacterium that secretes: (i) a particularly potent, pro-inflammatory LPS glycolipid subtype (BF-LPS); and (ii) a hydrolytic, extracellular zinc metalloproteinase known as B. fragilis toxin (BFT) or fragilysin. Ongoing studies support multiple observations that BF-LPS and BFT (fragilysin) disrupt paracellular barriers by cleavage of intercellular proteins, such as E-cadherin, between epithelial cells, resulting in 'leaky' barriers. These defective barriers, which also become more penetrable with age, in turn permit entry of microbiome-derived neurotoxic biopolymers into the systemic circulation from which they can next transit the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and gain access into the brain. This short communication will highlight some recent advances in this extraordinary research area that links the pro-inflammatory exudates of the GI-tract microbiome with innate-immune disturbances and inflammatory signaling within the human central nervous system (CNS) with reference to Alzheimer's disease (AD) wherever possible.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease (AD); Bacteroides fragilis and BFT (fragilysin); dysbiosis; lipopolysaccharide (LPS); microbiome and microbial genetics; neurofilament light (NF-L); neuroinflammation; synapsin-2 (SYN2)
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32117799 PMCID: PMC7028696 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.00022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Highly schematicized depiction of the potential transfer of GI-tract microbiome-derived pro-inflammatory neurotoxins across the GI-tract barrier into the systemic circulation, followed by translocation across the BBB into the brain parenchyma (see Hill et al., 2014a,b; Hill and Lukiw, 2015; Zhao and Lukiw, 2018a; neocortical region shown; solid black arrows). Neurotoxins identified to date include Bacteroides fragilis lipopolysaccharide (BF-LPS) and enterotoxins such as the Bacteroides fragilis-derived toxin (BFT) also known as fragilysin. The contribution of other pro-inflammatory neurotoxins such as GI-tract-derived amyloids and bacterial sncRNAs are not well-understood and currently very little is known concerning their neurotoxicity and CNS-effects. BF-LPS, BFT (fragilysin), age, dietary toxins, traumatic brain injury (TBI) and vascular disease are known to effectively disrupt endothelial cell-based biophysical barriers in part through the cleavage, disruption and/or degeneration of cell-cell adhesion proteins (Wu et al., 1998; Clement et al., 2016; Zhao and Lukiw, 2018a,b; Sweeney et al., 2019). We speculate that all of these neurotoxins together have potential to constitute a highly neurotoxic pro-inflammatory GI-tract microbiome-derived cocktail greatly detrimental to the cytoarchitecture and signaling functions of neuronal and glial cells. Gram-negative bacterial-derived LPS and related neurotoxins have been recently observed within the systemic circulation and brain parenchyma (Zhan et al., 2016, 2018; Zhao et al., 2017a,c, 2019; Zhao and Lukiw, 2018a), within and around neurons, and in the later stages of AD completely encapsulating neuronal neocortical nuclei (Hill et al., 2014b,a; Hill and Lukiw, 2015; Zhao and Lukiw, 2018a,b; unpublished observations); this later action appears to impair the exit of neuron-specific transcripts such as the neurofilament-light (NF-L) chain and synapsin-2 (SYN2) messenger RNA (mRNA) from the neuronal nuclei; both NF-L and SYN2 mRNA abundance and expression are down-regulated in LPS-treated human neuronal-glial (HNG) cells in primary culture and in AD brain (Lukiw et al., 2018; Zhao et al., 2019). Whether neurotoxins from the brain parenchyma of the neocortex can cross the BBB back into the systemic circulation (dashed black arrows with question mark) is currently not well-understood; if so, these species may be useful serum biomarkers for both the diagnosis and prognosis of AD and other types of inflammatory neurodegeneration; left panel = GI-tract microbiome magnification x ~3000 (source: http://www.Injnbio.com; http://www.lnjnbio.com/nd.jsp?id=20; permission to reproduce granted; last accessed 26 November 2019); right panel = 6-layered structure of the human association neocortex; layers 3 and 5 are the pyramidal cell layers targeted by the AD process; other brain regions may also be affected; magnification x ~20 (source: adapted and redrawn from Martinez-Conde, 2018; last accessed 26 November 2019).