| Literature DB >> 32508799 |
Malena Dos Santos Guilherme1, Hristo Todorov2,3,4, Carina Osterhof5, Anton Möllerke1, Kristina Cub1, Thomas Hankeln5, Susanne Gerber2,3, Kristina Endres1.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia. Besides its cognitive phenotype, AD leads to crucial changes in gut microbiome composition in model mice and in patients, but the reported data are still highly inconsistent. Therefore, we investigated chronic effects of AD-characteristic neurotoxic amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides as provided by transgenic overexpression (5xFAD mouse model) and acute effects due to oral application of Aβ on gut microbes. Astonishingly, one-time feeding of wild type mice with Aβ42 provoked immediate changes in gut microbiome composition (β diversity) as compared to controls. Such obvious changes were not observed when comparing 5xFAD mice with wild type littermates. However, acute as well as chronic exposure to Aβ significantly affected the abundance of numerous individual operational taxonomic units. This provides first evidence that acute in vivo exposure to Aβ results in a shift in the enteric microbiome. Furthermore, we suggest that chronic exposure to Aβ might trigger an adaptive response of gut microbiota which could thereby result in dysbiosis in model mice but also in human patients.Entities:
Keywords: 5xFAD; Alzheimer’s disease; Amyloid-β peptide; anti-microbial; microbiome; mouse model
Year: 2020 PMID: 32508799 PMCID: PMC7251927 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Toxic effects of synthetic Aβ42 on murine fecal microbial organisms. (A) Fecal samples of transgenic 5xFAD mice and wild type littermates were diluted and incubated with Aβ42 peptide or scrambled control (2 μM) for 10 min. Viability was measured and calculated in percent of scrambled peptide treated samples (n = 13 animals per group,♂ = 6–7, ♀ = 6–7). (B) Fecal material suspension from wild type mice were incubated with 2 or 10 μM Aβ42 or the respective amount of scrambled peptide. Subsequently, aliquots of further diluted bacteria suspension were plated on Schaedler agar and incubated anaerobically for 48 h at 37°C. Number of colony forming units (CFU) of samples treated with scrambled peptide control were set to 100% (n = 7 animals per group; ♂ = 3, ♀ = 4). (C, D) After incubation of fecal samples from transgenic or wild type mice with 2 μM Aβ42 or scrambled peptide, suspensions were spread on plates selective for Lactobacillaceae (C) and Enterobacteriaceae (D) (n = 10–11 per group, ♂ = 5–6, ♀ = 5). Datapoints for individual normalized measurements are shown in each graph (*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01).
FIGURE 3Diversity measures of gut microbiota following chronic or acute exposure to Aβ. Species richness and evenness of each experimental group were evaluated by estimating the Chao index and Shannon index, respectively. Panels (A) and (B) show results for wild type compared to 5xFAD mice. Differences in alpha diversity between wild type animals receiving scrambled Aβ (scAβ) or Aβ are depicted in panels (C) and (D). Data are shown as boxplots and individual values. Beta diversity was evaluated by calculating Bray–Curtis dissimilarity (E, G) and binary Jaccard distance (F, H). Results were visualized using canonical analysis of principal coordinates (CAP) for each dissimilarity measure separately. Since there are two groups in each ordination analysis, only one constrained dimension is calculated (CAP1), which is shown on the x-axis. The y-axis corresponds to the first unconstrained dimension (MDS1). Confidence ellipses around the respective group centroid were drawn at the 95% confidence level. The percentage of total inertia captured by each axis is shown in brackets. MDS: Multi-dimensional scaling.
FIGURE 2Stability and time-dependent localization of per os administered Aβ peptides in the murine gastrointestinal tract. (A) TAMRA-labeled Aβ peptide was incubated in two different concentrations [high (H): 0.025 μM; low (L): 0.005 μM] with PBS-diluted gastric content of wild type mice for 2 h at 37°C. Solvent of the peptide was used as a negative control (–). Additionally, samples with PBS instead of chyme were incubated as described (buffer). Proteins were separated on PAA gel and transferred to nitrocellulose. Detection of Aβ-dependent signal was conducted by antibody 6E10 (upper panel) or by fluorescence (lower panel). The arrow indicates a cross reactivity only occurring in chyme. (B) To assess the passage of orally administered Aβ peptides, wild type or 5xFAD mice were fed with 10 μg of TAMRA-labeled Aβ peptides and sacrificed at indicated time points. TAMRA-dependent fluorescence was determined in the chyme of 2 cm gut sections numbered from 1 (oral end = stomach) to 12 (rectal section). Values are presented as measured difference between the TAMRA-Aβ-treated animals and solvent-treated control animals (one animal per time point, technical duplicates).
FIGURE 4Community composition at the phylum level. Bars show the relative abundance of bacterial phyla in (A) wild type compared to 5xFAD mice and (B) wild type animals fed with scrambled Aβ (scAβ) versus active Aβ. Phyla with a relative abundance below 0.05% were filtered out from the data set. The label “p__” corresponds to operational taxonomic units that could not be classified to a reference phylum.
FIGURE 5Differential abundance analysis of bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs). Log2 fold changes of bacterial abundance were calculated using DESeq2. Volcano plots show the log2 fold changes versus –log10 adjusted p-values for 5xFAD relative to wild type mice (A) and animals fed with Aβ relative to mice receiving the scrambled peptide (C). OTUs were considered to be differentially abundant if the adjusted p-value (Benjamini–Hochberg method) was below 0.05 (indicated by a dashed horizontal line). Significant log2 fold changes appear as black dots in panels (A) and (C). The lowest level of taxonomy which could be assigned to the differentially abundant OTUs is depicted in panel (B) for 5xFAD mice relative to wild type littermates and in panel (D) for mice fed with Aβ relative to the scrambled peptide control group. Log2 fold changes greater than 0 correspond to OTUs significantly enriched in 5xFAD or Aβ-fed mice relative to the respective control group.