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Abnormalities in microbiota/butyrate/FFAR3 signaling in aging gut impair brain function
Sidharth P. Mishra, … , Sushil G. Rane, Hariom Yadav
Sidharth P. Mishra, … , Sushil G. Rane, Hariom Yadav
Published February 8, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(3):e168443. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.168443.
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Research Article Aging Microbiology

Abnormalities in microbiota/butyrate/FFAR3 signaling in aging gut impair brain function

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Abstract

Aging-related abnormalities in gut microbiota are associated with cognitive decline, depression, and anxiety, but underlying mechanisms remain unstudied. Here, our study demonstrated that transplanting old gut microbiota to young mice induced inflammation in the gut and brain coupled with cognitive decline, depression, and anxiety. We observed diminished mucin formation and increased gut permeability (“leaky gut”) with a reduction in beneficial metabolites like butyrate because of decline in butyrate-producing bacteria in the aged gut microbiota. This led to suppressed expression of butyrate receptors, free fatty acid receptors 2 and 3 (FFAR2/3). Administering butyrate alleviated inflammation, restored mucin expression and gut barriers, and corrected brain dysfunction. Furthermore, young mice with intestine-specific loss of FFAR2/3 exhibited gut and brain abnormalities akin to those in older mice. Our results demonstrate that reduced butyrate-producing bacteria in aged gut microbiota result in low butyrate levels and reduced FFAR2/3 signaling, leading to suppressed mucin formation that increases gut permeability, inflammation, and brain abnormalities. These findings underscore the significance of butyrate-FFAR2/3 agonism as a potential strategy to mitigate aged gut microbiota–induced detrimental effects on gut and brain health in older adults.

Authors

Sidharth P. Mishra, Shalini Jain, Bo Wang, Shaohua Wang, Brandi C. Miller, Jea Y. Lee, Cesar V. Borlongan, Lin Jiang, Julie Pollak, Subhash Taraphder, Brian T. Layden, Sushil G. Rane, Hariom Yadav

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Figure 2

Old gut microbiota transplantation induces age-related leaky gut, inflammation, and behavioral abnormalities, and young microbiota transplantation reduces them.

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Old gut microbiota transplantation induces age-related leaky gut, inflam...
(A–C) Old FMT significantly increased leaky gut (FITC-dextran leakage) (A) and inflammatory markers (Il1b, Il6, and Tnfa) in the ileum (B) and brain (C) of recipient mice. (D–I) Old FMT instigated behavioral changes, such as cognitive dysfunction (Morris water maze [MWM] test) (D), depression (forced swim [FS] and splash tests) (E and F), and anxiety (novel cage [NC], marble burying [MB], and open field [OF] tests) (G–I). (J–R) Interestingly, young FMT to old mice significantly ameliorated leaky gut (J), inflammation in the ileum (K) and brain (L), and cognitive decline (M), depression (N and O), and anxiety (P–R) behaviors. All values represent the mean of 5–10 animals in each group, and error bars represent the standard error of the means. Statistical significance was determined using a 2-tailed t test, as applicable, and P values of *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, and ***P < 0.001 are statistically significant.

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