| Literature DB >> 36093196 |
Jia Song1, Bi Zhou1, Juntao Kan2, Guangya Liu3, Sheng Zhang1, Liang Si1, Xianping Zhang1, Xue Yang2, Junhua Ma1, Junrui Cheng4, Yongde Yang1, Xiaobo Liu1.
Abstract
Perinatal depression is a mood disorder that is reported in women during pregnancy (prenatal) and after childbirth (postnatal). The onset of perinatal depression is associated with changes in reproductive hormones, stress hormones and neurosteroids. These chemical compounds can be modulated by the gut microbiota, which may affect maternal mental health during the perinatal period via the gut-brain-axis. Recent studies suggest that nutritional and dietary interventions (vitamin D, ω-3 fatty acids, iron, and fiber) effectively prevent or mitigate maternal depression and anxiety, but their efficacy is confounded by various factors, including the gut microbiota. Probiotics are efficacious in maintaining microbiota homeostasis, and thus, have the potential to modulate the development of perinatal mood disorders, despite no evidence in human. Therefore, clinical trials are warranted to investigate the role of probiotic supplementation in perinatal depression and behavioral changes. This article reviews the interplay between nutrition, gut microbiota and mood and cognition, and the evidence suggesting that probiotics affect the onset and development of perinatal depression.Entities:
Keywords: fiber; microbiota; nutrition; perinatal depression; probiotics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36093196 PMCID: PMC9459161 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.932309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 6.073
The effects of nutrients on the gut microbiota and depression.
| Nutrients | Microbiota Genus | Change with supplementation | Increase or decrease in depressive patients | Overall effect on depression |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D |
| Inhibit | Increase | Ameliorate |
|
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate | |
|
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate | |
|
| Decrease | Increase | Ameliorate | |
|
| Enhance | Unknown | Unknown | |
|
| Decrease | Increase | Ameliorate | |
|
| Decrease | Unknown | Unknown | |
|
| Decrease | Increase | Ameliorate | |
| ω-3 PUFA |
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate |
|
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate | |
|
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate | |
| Fiber (FOS, GOS) |
| Inhibit | Increase | Ameliorate |
|
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate | |
|
| Enhance | Unknown | Unknown | |
|
| Enhance | Decrease | Ameliorate | |
|
| Inhibit | Unknown | Unknown | |
|
| Inhibit | Unknown | Unknown | |
|
| Inhibit | Unknown | Unknown | |
| Iron |
| Inhibit | Decrease | Promote |
|
| Inhibit | Decrease | Promote |
Figure 1Diet and nutrition may regulate perinatal depression via the microbiota-gut-brain axis by influencing systemic biomarkers including estrogen, neurotransmitters, inflammatory cytokines and microbial metabolites. The role of probiotics on perinatal depression is controversial.
Figure 2GUS-coding microbiota produces GUS to cleave and activate conjugated estrogen, which is released to the circulating system and binds to ERα, resulting in alleviated depression in women with low estrogen. GUS, β-glucuronidase; ER, estrogen receptor.
Neurotransmitter producing bacteria.
| Microbiota | Neurotransmitter released | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | ||
| Bacillus |
| Acetylcholine | ( |
| Dopamine | |||
| Noradrenaline | |||
| Bacillus |
| Noradrenaline | ( |
| Bacteroides |
| GABA | ( |
| Bifidobacterium |
| GABA | ( |
| Bifidobacterium |
| GABA | ( |
| Bifidobacterium |
| GABA | ( |
| Lactobacillus |
| GABA | ( |
| Lactobacillus |
| Dopamine | ( |
| Glutamate | |||
| Norepinephrine | |||
| Lactobacillus |
| GABA | ( |
| Dopamine | |||
| Glutamate | |||
| Norepinephrine | |||
| Lactobacillus |
| Dopamine | ( |
| GABA | |||
| Glutamate | |||
| Norepinephrine | |||
| Serotonin | |||
| Lactobacillus |
| GABA | ( |
| Glutamate | |||
| Lactobacillus |
| Acetylcholine | ( |
| Dopamine | |||
| GABA | |||
| Glutamate | |||
| Histamine | |||
| Serotonin | |||
| Lactobacillus |
| GABA | ( |
| Lactobacillus |
| GABA | ( |
| Serratia |
| Dopamine | ( |
| Noradrenaline | |||
| Staphylococcus |
| Dopamine | ( |
| Noradrenaline | |||
Figure 3Microbiota dysbiosis increases pro-inflammatory cytokines, which promote the differentiation of naïve autoreactive CD4+ T-cells in Th17 cells and subsequently cause neurodegeneration. Elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines can also impair the tight junctions, leading to the intestinal transport of microorganisms and bacterial toxins, causing neuroinflammation. Microbiota dysbiosis decreases SCFAs, which exhibit neuroprotective functions by enhancing the intestinal tight junction and up-regulating the PPARγ and Nrf2 signaling pathways.
Figure 4Action mechanisms of probiotics on depression via regulating systemic biomarkers. CRF, Corticotropin releasing factor; ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone; MAPK, MAP kinase; GABA, γ-Aminobutyric acid. Red squares indicate an increased level in depressive patients; green squares indicate a decreased level in depressive patients.
Characteristics of studies evaluating the role of probiotics in perinatal depression.
| Author, year | Number of subjects | Intervention period | Probiotics | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Browne, 2021 | Probiotics (n = 20); placebo (n = 20). | From 26 to 30 weeks of gestation until delivery. |
| Probiotics significantly enhanced cognitive reactivity but did not alter anxiety (general, maternal), depression, and pregnancy-related and general daily hassles. |
| Hulkkonen, 2021 | Fish oil (FO) + placebo (n = 87); probiotics + placebo (n = 96); FO + probiotics (n = 93); placebo + placebo (n = 67). | From <18 weeks of gestation until 6-month postpartum. |
| Compared with the FO + placebo group, FO + probiotics group had a significantly higher depression score from early to late pregnancy. |
| Dawe, 2020 | Probiotics (n = 115); placebo (n = 115). | From 12-18 weeks of gestation until 36 weeks of gestation |
| Probiotics did not improve maternal anxiety, and functional health and well-being (physical and mental). |
| Slykerman, 2017 | Probiotics (n = 212); placebo (n = 211). | From 14-16 weeks of gestation until 6-month postpartum |
| Probiotic supplementation was significantly associated with reduced depression and anxiety. |