Abstract
There
is a growing awareness of the potential for microbiota to influence
gut-brain communication in health and disease. A variety of strategies
have been used to study the impact of the microbiota on brain function
and these include antibiotic use, probiotic treatments, fecal microbiota
transplantation, gastrointestinal infection studies, and germ-free
studies. All of these approaches provide evidence to support the view
that the microbiota can influence brain chemistry and consequently
behavior. Efforts are now turning to investigate the role of microbiota
in animal models of psychopathology. Animal models of depression are
thus essential in studying the complex interplay between the microbiota
and brain. Recent studies published in this Journal and elsewhere
demonstrate that there is a distinct perturbation of the composition of
gut microbiota in animal models of depression and chronic stress. This
has direct implications for the development of psychobiotic-based
therapeutic strategies for psychiatric disorders. Moreover, given that
affective co-morbidities, such as major depression and anxiety states,
are common in patients presenting with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS),
it may have implications for functional bowel disorders also. Further
studies require appropriately phenotyped patients with depression and/or
IBS using a judicious use of techniques including functional imaging
and in depth microbial pyrosequencing.
more information: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nmo.12198/abstract
more information: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nmo.12198/abstract
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