| Literature DB >> 35010912 |
Tom Knuesel1, M Hasan Mohajeri1.
Abstract
A growing number of studies in rodents indicate a connection between the intestinal microbiota and the brain, but comprehensive human data is scarce. Here, we systematically reviewed human studies examining the connection between the intestinal microbiota and major depressive and bipolar disorder. In this review we discuss various changes in bacterial abundance, particularly on low taxonomic levels, in terms of a connection with the pathophysiology of major depressive and bipolar disorder, their use as a diagnostic and treatment response parameter, their health-promoting potential, as well as novel adjunctive treatment options. The diversity of the intestinal microbiota is mostly decreased in depressed subjects. A consistent elevation of phylum Actinobacteria, family Bifidobacteriaceae, and genus Bacteroides, and a reduction of family Ruminococcaceae, genus Faecalibacterium, and genus Roseburia was reported. Probiotics containing Bifidobacterium and/or Lactobacillus spp. seemed to improve depressive symptoms, and novel approaches with different probiotics and synbiotics showed promising results. Comparing twin studies, we report here that already with an elevated risk of developing depression, microbial changes towards a "depression-like" microbiota were found. Overall, these findings highlight the importance of the microbiota and the necessity for a better understanding of its changes contributing to depressive symptoms, potentially leading to new approaches to alleviate depressive symptoms via alterations of the gut microbiota.Entities:
Keywords: affective disorder; bacteria; depression; gut-brain-axis; probiotics; therapy; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35010912 PMCID: PMC8746924 DOI: 10.3390/nu14010037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Methodical approach of our review due to PRISMA criteria [38].
A selection of the most used diversity indices and measures, showing an unchanged or lower microbial diversity in depressed individuals.
| Source | Shannon | Ace | Chao1 | Nr. OTUs | UniFrac | PLS-DA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | D = | D sign. | ||||
| [ | aMDD | MDD = | MDD = | MDD = | ||
| [ | MDD = | |||||
| [ | MDD = | MDD = | ||||
| [ | BD | BD | BD, MDD, C sign. | |||
| [ | P = | P = | ||||
| [ | P | P | ||||
| [ | MDD = | MDD = | MDD sign. | |||
| [ | MDD =, BD = | MDD | ||||
| [ | MDD = | MDD = | MDD = | MDD sign. | ||
| [ | BD = | BD = | BD = | BD = | ||
| [ | D = | D | D = | |||
| [ | BD | BD | BD sign. | |||
| [ | D = IBS | D = IBS | D, IBS sign. | |||
| [ | IBS | IBS sign. | ||||
| [ | MDD = | MDD = | MDD sign. | |||
| [ | MDD | MDD | MDD | MDD sign. | ||
| [ | pm = | |||||
| [ | D | |||||
| [ | D | D | ||||
| [ | MDD sign. | |||||
| [ | MDD = | MDD sign. | ||||
| [ | BD = | BD = | BD sign. | |||
| [ | BD = | BD sign. |
“UniFrac” includes weighted and/or unweighted UniFrac distances. “↓” shows a significantly reduced diversity in diseased subjects compared to controls or an inverse correlation with more severe symptoms, while “↑” indicates a significantly increased diversity or a positive correlation with more severe symptoms. “=” demonstrates no significant difference, while “sign.” shows a significant difference. Empty cells symbolize that no results were reported. Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; C, control group; P, psychiatric subjects; D, depression in general; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; a, active disease group; r, response group; pm, psychiatric measures; OTU, operational taxonomic unit; *, only showing a trend, due to small sample size.
Different abundance on phylum level, with the studies sorted by age of the diseased subjects.
| Source | Mean Age (Years) | Bacteroidetes | Firmicutes | Proteobacteria | Actinobacteria | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | MDD 21.9; C 22.1 | MDD | MDD | |||
| [ | MDD 24.0; C 25.0 | MDD | MDD | |||
| [ | BD 24.2; C 36.3 | BD | BD | BD | ||
| [ | aMDD 25.3; rMDD 27.1; C 26.8 | MDD | MDD | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | MDD 26.5; BD 25.6; C 26.9 | MDD | BD | BD | ||
| [ | non-D 33.4 |
| ||||
| [ | P 35.7 |
| ||||
| [ | MDD 36.2; C 38.1 | MDD | M | MDD | ||
| [ | MDD 40.6; C 41.8 | MDD | MDD | |||
| [ | BD 41.3; C 31.4 | BD | ||||
| [ | MDD 41.5; C 44.0 | MDD | MDD | |||
| [ | MDD 41.6; BD 38.4; C 39.5 | MDD | MDD | BD | MDD | |
| [ | MDD 43.7, C 39.4 | MDD | MDD | |||
| [ | MDD 43.9; C 39.6 | MDD | M | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | D 44.8; IBS 38.5; D + IBS 39.0; C 43.9 | D | D | |||
| [ | IBS + Di 45.0; IBS (non-Di) 33.0 |
| ||||
| [ | MDD 45.0; C 47.2 | MDD | MDD | |||
| [ | MDD 45.8; C 41.2 | MDD | MDD | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | MDD 48.7; C 42.3 | MDD | ||||
| [ | D 49.2; C 46.1 | D | ||||
Elevated Bacteroidetes and reduced Firmicutes were found in young-aged, depressed subjects, while in middle-aged those phyla showed opposite correlations. Actinobacteria was consistently increased. “↓” and green symbolizes a significant reduction in diseased subjects or inverse correlation with more severe symptoms, while “↑” and orange shows a significant elevation or positive correlation with more severe symptoms. Grey symbolizes only a trend, while empty cells symbolize that no significant results were reported. Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; C, control group; D, depression in general; non-D, non-depressed subjects; Di, distressed subjects; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; P, psychiatric subjects; a, active disorder group; r, response group; *, only showing an insignificant trend.
Different abundance of genus Bacteroides.
| Source | Genus | |
|---|---|---|
| [ | aMDD | rMDD |
| [ | negative mood | |
| [ | BD | |
| MDD | ||
| [ | anhedonia | |
| anxiety | ||
| [ | MDD | |
| [ | anxiety | |
| [ | MDD | |
| [ | D | |
| [ | BD | |
| [ | MDD | |
| [ | BD | |
Most studies reported an elevation correlating with affective disorder and depressive symptoms. “↓” and green symbolizes a significant reduction in diseased subjects or inverse correlation with more severe symptoms, while “↑” and orange shows a significant elevation or positive correlation with more severe symptoms, and grey symbolizes alterations in both directions or not evaluable. Brackets include additional information about the reported correlation (which bacteria showed a correlation or in which subgroup of subjects a correlation was found). Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; D, depression in general; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; B-P group, Bacteroides-Prevotella group; m, a correlation only in male subjects; a, active disease group; r, response group; OTU, operational taxonomic unit within genus Bacteroides.
Different abundance of genus Roseburia.
| Source | Genus |
|---|---|
| [ | aMDD |
| [ | |
| [ | BD |
| [ | anhedonia |
| [ | P |
| [ | BD |
| [ | D |
| [ | MDD |
| [ | D |
| [ | MDD |
| [ | BD |
Most studies reported a reduction correlating with affective disorder and negative mood. “↓” and green symbolizes a significant reduction in diseased subjects or inverse correlation with more severe symptoms, while “↑” and orange shows a significant elevation or positive correlation with more severe symptoms, and grey symbolizes only a trend. Brackets include additional information about the reported correlation (which bacteria showed a correlation or in which subgroup of patients a correlation was found). Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; D, depression in general; f, a correlation only in female subjects; a, active disorder; OTU, operational taxonomic unit within genus Roseburia; *, only negatively correlating with symptom severity, but not significantly correlating with BD compared to healthy controls.
Different abundance of family Ruminococcaceae and two of its members, genus Ruminococcus and Faecalibacterium.
| Source | Family Ruminococcaceae | Genus | Genus |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | MDD | aMDD | MDD |
| [ | MDD | MDD | MDD |
| [ | negative mood | ||
| [ | MDD | ||
| BD | |||
| [ | anhedonia | ||
| [ | P | P | P |
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | BD | BD | |
| [ | BD | BD | |
| [ | D | ||
| [ | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | D | ||
| [ | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | BD | BD | |
| [ | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | BD | ||
| [ | lower QoL | ||
| [ | DASS | ||
| [ | BD | BD |
Most studies reported an elevation of these bacteria correlating with better health. “↓” and green symbolizes a significant reduction in diseased subjects or inverse correlation with more severe symptoms, while “↑” and orange shows a significant elevation or positive correlation with more severe symptoms, and grey symbolizes alterations in both directions. Brackets include additional information about the reported correlation (which bacteria showed a correlation or in which subgroup of patients a correlation was found). Empty cells symbolize that no significant results were reported. Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; D, depression in general; P, psychiatric subjects; DASS, depression anxiety stress scales; QoL, quality of life; f, a correlation only in female subjects; a, active disorder; OTU, operational taxonomic unit.
Different abundances of family Bifidobacteriaceae and genus Bifidobacterium.
| Source | Family Bifidobacteriaceae | Genus | |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | negative mood | ||
| [ | MDD | BD = | |
| [ | anhedonia | anhedonia | |
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | MDD | MDD | |
| [ | HDRS | ||
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | MDD | ||
| [ | BD = | ||
| [ | MDD | ||
Results tended to show a negative effect of an elevation of these bacteria. “↓” and green symbolizes a significant reduction in diseased subjects or inverse correlation with more severe symptoms, while “↑” and orange shows a significant elevation or positive correlation with more severe symptoms, and “=” and grey symbolizes no correlation. Brackets include additional information about the reported correlation (which bacteria showed a correlation or in which subgroup of patients a correlation was found). Empty cells symbolize that no significant results were reported. Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; HDRS, Hamilton depression rating scale; f, a correlation only in female subjects.
Effect of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics on depression.
| Source | Subjects; Pre-/Syn-/Probiotics | Influence on Depression/Depressive Symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| [ | MDD; | +(treatment response, remission) |
| [ | D; | =(BDI, BAI, DASS) |
| [ | H; | +(depression, anxiety, sleep) |
| [ | H; | +(HADS, fatigue, mental state) |
| [ | H; | +(depressive mood, anxiety, sleep, stress) |
| [ | C; any probiotics/supplementation | =(PHQ-9) |
| [ | Dialysis; | +with synbiotics (HADS, BDNF)=with probiotics (HADS, BDNF) |
| [ | MDD; galacto-oligosaccaride; | =with prebiotics (BDI)+with probiotics (BDI) |
| [ | MDD; | =(HDRS, PSS)+(attention, perceptivity, verbal learning) |
| [ | D; | =(MADRS, DASS) |
| [ | H; | +(depression, anxiety) |
| [ | IBS with anx. or depr.; | +(HADS, QoL, brain activity) |
| [ | H; | =(BDI, BAI)+(cognitive reactivity to sad mood) |
| [ | MDD; | +(BDI, serum hs-CPR) |
| [ | BD; | =(YMRS, HDRS) |
Results mostly showed positive effects, but several studies could not find significant differences. “+” symbolizes a significantly positive health effect, while “=” indicates no significant difference. In brackets a selection of the investigated measures is given. Abbreviations: MDD, major depressive disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; D, participants with depressive symptoms; H, healthy participants; C, cross-sectional study; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; BDI, Beck depression inventory; BAI, Beck anxiety inventory; DASS, depression anxiety stress scales; HADS, hospital anxiety and depression scale; PHQ-9, patient health questionnaire; HDRS, Hamilton depression rating scale; PSS, perceived stress scale; MADRS, Montgomery-Åsberg depression rating scale; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; QoL, quality of life; hs-CPR, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; YMRS, young mania rating scale.
Bacteria (with taxonomic level) that correlated most with depression.
| More Abundant in Depressive Subjects | Less Abundant in Depressive Subjects |
|---|---|
| Actinobacteria (phylum) | Christensenellaceae and |
| Bifidobacteriaceae and | |
| Ruminococcaceae (family) | |
| Sutterellaceae and |