| Literature DB >> 33807290 |
Tracey Bear1,2,3, Julie Dalziel3,4, Jane Coad1, Nicole Roy3,5,6, Christine Butts2, Pramod Gopal2,3.
Abstract
Episodes of depression and anxiety commonly follow the experience of stress, however not everyone who experiences stress develops a mood disorder. Individuals who are able to experience stress without a negative emotional effect are considered stress resilient. Stress-resilience (and its counterpart stress-susceptibility) are influenced by several psychological and biological factors, including the microbiome-gut-brain axis. Emerging research shows that the gut microbiota can influence mood, and that stress is an important variable in this relationship. Stress alters the gut microbiota and plausibly this could contribute to stress-related changes in mood. Most of the reported research has been conducted using animal models and demonstrates a relationship between gut microbiome and mood. The translational evidence from human clinical studies however is rather limited. In this review we examine the microbiome-gut-brain axis research in relation to stress resilience.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; enteric nervous system; gut microbiota; gut-inflammation; gut-permeability; mood; probiotics; stress; vagus nerve
Year: 2021 PMID: 33807290 PMCID: PMC8065970 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9040723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Summary of studies testing the effects of probiotic supplements on mood. Effect on mood is indicated with: + for a positive effect on mood, − for a negative effect on mood, and / for no effect on mood. Abbreviations: LDB, Light Dark Box; SDT, Step Down Test; FST, Forced Swim Test; SPT, Sucrose Preference Test; PSS, Perceived Stress Scale; BAI, Beck Depression Inventory; BDI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale; POMS, Profile of Mood State.
| Subject, Study Design and Model | Probiotic | Dose and Administration | Treatment Duration | Effect on Mood | Reference | |
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| Male AKR mice with parasite-induced | Gavaged daily, dose not specified | 10 days | Reduction in anxiety-like behaviors in the LDB | + | [ | |
| Immunodeficient (B and T cell-deficient) male and female Rag 1−/− mice | 109 CFU/mL in drinking water daily | 4 weeks | Probiotic supplement normalized deficits in anxiety in LDB tests | + | [ | |
| Male C57BL/6 mice with liver inflammation-induced sickness behavior and brain inflammation | Commercial mixture VSL#3: | 1.7 billion bacteria/day, gavaged daily | 10 days | Prevention of a decrease in social interaction | + | [ |
| Male AKR mice with chemically induced colitis | 100 µL of 1 × 1010 CFU | 7 days | A probiotic supplementation reduced anxiety-like behavior in SDT, but only when the vagus nerve was intact | +/ | [ | |
| Male Sprague Dawley Rats | 4.5 g (2.5 × 109 CFU/g) of freeze-dried powder in 30 mL of tap water per cage (2 rats) daily | 10 weeks | A probiotic mix decreased depressive-like behavior in FST | + | [ | |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats following maternal separation stress | 1 × 1010 live bacterial cells/100 mL drinking water | 55 days | A probiotic supplement ameriorated MSS induced depressive-like behavior in FST | + | [ | |
| A probiotic given alongside 3 weeks of restraint stress in male Sprague Dawley rats |
| 109 CFU/mL live bacteria in drinking water | 3 weeks | Probiotic ameliorated stress-induced depressive-like behavior in SPT, and anxiety like behavior in EPM | + | [ |
| Male BALB/c mice | 109 CFU, gavaged daily | 28 days | Decreased anxiety-like behaviors in the EPM | + | [ | |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats |
| 104 CFU/mL in drinking water | 14 days | Increase in anxiety-like behavior in the OFT and no difference in anxiety-like behavior in the EPM | − | [ |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats | 1 × 1010 live bacterial cells/100 mL drinking water | 14 days | No decrease in depressive-like behaviors in FST | / | [ | |
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| Healthy adult men | 109 CFU, probiotic capsule, daily | 8 weeks | No reduction in subjective stress measure, depression or anxiety scores on the PSS, BAI or BDI scales or improve cognitive measures | / | [ | |
| Healthy men and women | 3 × 109 CFU probiotic capsule daily | 30 days | Reduction in depression and anxiety scores (HADS). In a subset of people with low baseline urinary cortisol, the perceived stress scores were also reduced by the probiotic | + | [ | |
| Healthy men and women | 2.5 × 109 CFU probiotic capsule daily | 4 weeks | Reduction in participant’s cognitive reactivity to sad mood | + | [ | |
| Men and women with chronic fatigue syndrome | 8 × 109 CFU probiotic capsule daily | 2 months | Improved anxiety (BAI) but not depressive (BDI) symptoms | +/ | [ | |
| Healthy men and women | Milk drink containing probiotic | 6.5 × 109 CFU in a milk drink | Improvement in mood in POMS only in those who already had low mood | +/ | [ | |
| Men and women with irritable bowel syndrome | Yohgurt containing | 5 × 107 cfu/mL × 200 mL milk drink, daily | 8 weeks | The probiotic yoghurt drink did not improve mood scores in HADS | / | [ |
| Men and women with diagnosed depression | 8 weeks | Reduction in symptoms of depression I BDI, along with fasting plasma insulin, glutathione, and C-reactive protein | + | [ |
Figure 1The proposed mechanisms of the microbiome-gut-brain axis (MGBA) are complex and intertwined. Emerging research shows that psychological stress interacts not only directly with the brain and mood, but also with many of the MGBA mechanisms thought to contribute to changes in mood with alteration of the gut microbiota. Solid lines indicate strong evidence of an effect, and dotted lines show proposed mechanisms with limited but emerging evidence. Abbreviations: HPA; Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal.
Summary of studies investigating links between stress and the gut microbiota. Microbiota which show an association (not necessarily causality) with stress-resilience and stress-sensitivity are indicated in the columns labeled SR and SS, respectively. This depends on the study but may mean, e.g., a probiotic supplement which increased stress-resilience, or an increase in relative abundance of the microbiota in stress-resilient individuals. Abbreviations: EPM, Elevated Plus Maze; FST, Forced Swim Test; TST, Tail Suspension Test; HbA1c, Hemoglobin A1c; IL, Interleukin; IFN-γ, Interferon gamma; LDB, Light-Dark Box; OFT, Open Field Test; NOR, Novel Object Recognition; MSS, Maternal Separation Stress.
| Study Design (Stress, Subjects, Intervention) | Results | SR | SS | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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FST BALB/c mice (M, adult) Probiotic |
Increase in anxiety-like (EPM) and depressive like behaviour (FST). Both ameliorated by probiotic Stress-induced increase in corticosterone ameliorated by probiotic. Stress-induced hyperthermia not affected by probiotic. Vagotomy prevented the anxiolytic effects of the probiotic. Changes in gut microbiota not reported | Probiotic: | Not applicable | [ |
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Chronic mild stress, 7 w C57BL/6J Mice (M, 7 w) Probiotic: |
Increase in depression-like behaviour (FST): prevented by probiotic. Increase in serum kynurenine following stress. Prevented by probiotic. Inhibition of the enzyme IDO1 by Decreased (fecal) class | Probiotic: | Decrease in (fecal) | [ |
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Grid floor stress, 15 d BALB/c mice (F, 5 w) No intervention |
Increase in anxiety-like (triple test) and depressive-like behaviour (TST) Lower blood glucose but highter HbA1c were found. Cytokines were reduced in the control mice but not the stressed mice. Correlations were found between IL-6, IFN-γ, and behavior in the LDB, EPM, and OFT. Increase in (cecal) | Not applicable | [ | |
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MSS, 15 d Sprague Dawley rats, sex not stated, 4 d neonatal Probiotic |
Behaviour not measured Increase in serum cortisol and gut permeability. Prevented by probiotic Decrease in genus Increases in cortisol, gut permeability, and bacterial adherence/penetration was prevented by probiotic supplementation. | Probiotic: | Not applicable | [ |
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MSS, 15 d Sprague Dawley rats (M, 90 d) Probiotic |
Increase in depressive-like behviour (FST), ameliorated by probiotic supplementation No difference in plasma corticosterone, L-kynurenine, tryptophan or kynurenic acid. An increase in IL-6 following stimulation with immune stimulant concanavalin A was prevented by the probiotic Gut microbiota not measured | Probiotic: | Not applicable | [ |
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MSS, 10 d Sprague Dawley rats (M, 7–8 w) No intervention |
Increased stress-induced faecal boli number in the OFT, but no changes in behavior Increased plasma corticosterone and increased systemic immune response in response to in vitro LPS challenge. Decreased pain threshold Change in microbiota structure (taxa not specified) | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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MSS, 1 w Infant rhesus monkeys (M+F, 6–9 m) No intervention |
Decrease in total abundance of fecal bacteria and | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Prenatal stress Human infants No intervention |
Gastrointestinal symptoms more common in babies from mothers who reported higher stress. Cortisol and stress related questionnaires did not correlate in the mothers. Increased fecal | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Prenatal (dam exposed to CMS) Offspring of pregnant C57BL mice exposed to CMS stress No intervention |
Behavior not measured Increased fecal | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Prenatal (dam exposed to restraint stress) Offspring of pregnant C57/B16 mice No intervention |
Offspring showed increase in anxiey-like behvior (EPM, NOR) in adulthood Increased plasma IL-1β in placenta and fetal brains but did not persist till adulthood. Decreased BDNF found in maternal placenta and in brains of adult offspring. Microbial community composition clustered differently in the stress group from control in both pregnant dams and their offspring | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Restraint Stress (16 h/d × 7 d) Swiss Webster & CD-1 mice (M, 6–8 w) Fecal transplant from stressed mice to germ free mice |
Behaviour not measured Increased inflammatory response to colonic pathogen in germ free mice with fecal transplant from stressor exposed mice. Increased (fecal) | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Restraint Stress (6 h/d × 3 w) Sprague Dawley rats (M, 220–240 g) Probiotic: |
Increased depressive-like behavior (SPT) and anxiety-like behavior (EPM, OF). Body weight was reduced. Increase in plasma corticosterone and pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF-α and IFN-γ and decrease in plasma IL-10. Decreased BDNF in the hippocampus, prevented by probiotic Stress-induced changes in behaviour, corticosterone, IL-10, BDNF were prevented by the probiotic supplementation Gut microbiota not measured | Probiotic: | Not applicable | [ |
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Restraint stress, 12 h/d × 7 d CD1 mice (M, 8 w) No intervention |
Behaviour not measured Increased TNF-α gene expression in colonic tissue Total bacteria and Gram negative bacteria increased in small intestine, cecum, and large intestine. Decrease in bacterial diversity and richness. Reduced family | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Restraint Stress, 15 h/d × 7 d CD-1 mice (M, 6–8 w) No intervention |
In the (colonic) mucosca-associated bacteria, a decrease in the families | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Restraint stress/FST alternated, 19 days CF-1 mice (M+F, 6 w) |
Distance travelled in EPM and LDB increased, increased rearings in OF. Blood collected after behavioral tests Males had higher corticosterone levels following acute stress (behavioral testing) Increase in family | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Social stress: cage in cage aggressor CD1 and C57BL/6 mice (M, 6–8 w) |
Behaviour not measured No difference in colonic cytokines Decrease in relative abundance of families | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Social stress: chronic social defeat C57BL/6 mice (M, 8 w) |
Decrease in social interaction Increase in (fecal) genus |
| Not applicable | [ |
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Social stress: resident intruder, 6 h/d × 10 d C57BL/6J male, juvenile (5–6 wk) |
Behaviour not measured Differed across time points. Key changes were a decrease in phylums Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Verrucomicrobia; and genera Oscilospira and Anaeroplasma, with a trend in decrease in Lactobacillus. An increase and decrease in Akkermansia were found at different time points. A trend of increase in phylum Proteobacteria was found | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Social stressor (6 d × 2 h/d) CD1 Mice (M, 8 w) Antibiotics (ampicillin (1 mg/mL), vancomycin (0.5 mg/mL), neomycin sulfate (1 mg/mL), and metronidazole (1 mg/mL)) |
Behaviour not measured Increase in proinflammatory markers, particularly IL-6, prevented in antibiotic group Immediately after induced stress, the (cecal) microbiome of mice had consistently altered within the group, and clustered separately from the control group, but after 15 h, the separation was no longer as clear, with variation within the stress group.Within genera, decrease in Stress-induced increases in plasma IL-6 was inversley correlated with relative abundances of genera | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |
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Water Avoidance Stress (1 h/d × 7 d) C57BL/6N mice (F, 6 w) Antibiotics during stress (Bacitracin A, Neomycin, Amphotericin B) |
Pain related behavior in response to intracolonic capsaicum increased. Slightly mitigated with antibiotics. Increased fecal pellet output, plasma corticosterone, and adrenal gland weight. Increased luminal s-IgA levels. In the colon tissue, cannabanoid receptors increased marginally, and tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH1) expression increased by 40% Antibiotics and stress enhanced bacterial adherence to luminal wall. Fecal | Not applicable | Not applicable | [ |