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Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice

Aging has a significant impact on physiology with implications for central nervous system function coincident with increased vulnerability to stress exposures. A number of stress-sensitive molecular mechanisms are hypothesized to underpin age-related changes in brain function. Recent cumulative evid...

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Autores principales: Cruz-Pereira, Joana S., Moloney, Gerard M., Bastiaanssen, Thomaz F.S., Boscaini, Serena, Tofani, Gabriel, Borras-Bisa, Julia, van de Wouw, Marcel, Fitzgerald, Patrick, Dinan, Timothy G., Clarke, Gerard, Cryan, John F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9755060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36532371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2022.100501
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author Cruz-Pereira, Joana S.
Moloney, Gerard M.
Bastiaanssen, Thomaz F.S.
Boscaini, Serena
Tofani, Gabriel
Borras-Bisa, Julia
van de Wouw, Marcel
Fitzgerald, Patrick
Dinan, Timothy G.
Clarke, Gerard
Cryan, John F.
author_facet Cruz-Pereira, Joana S.
Moloney, Gerard M.
Bastiaanssen, Thomaz F.S.
Boscaini, Serena
Tofani, Gabriel
Borras-Bisa, Julia
van de Wouw, Marcel
Fitzgerald, Patrick
Dinan, Timothy G.
Clarke, Gerard
Cryan, John F.
author_sort Cruz-Pereira, Joana S.
collection PubMed
description Aging has a significant impact on physiology with implications for central nervous system function coincident with increased vulnerability to stress exposures. A number of stress-sensitive molecular mechanisms are hypothesized to underpin age-related changes in brain function. Recent cumulative evidence also suggests that aging impacts gut microbiota composition. However, the impact of such effects on the ability of mammals to respond to stress in aging is still relatively unexplored. Therefore, in this study we assessed the ability of a microbiota-targeted intervention (the prebiotic FOS-Inulin) to alleviate age-related responses to stress. Exposure of aged C57BL/6 mice to social defeat led to an altered social interaction phenotype in the social interaction test, which was reversed by FOS-Inulin supplementation. Interestingly, this occured independent of affecting social defeat-induced elevations in the stress hormone corticosterone. Additionally, the behavioral modifications following FOS-Inulin supplementation were also not coincident with improvement of pro-inflammatory markers. Metabolomics analysis was performed and intriguingly, age associated metabolites were shown to be reduced in the prefrontal cortex of stressed aged mice and this deficit was recovered by FOS-Inulin supplementation. Taken together these results suggest that prebiotic dietary intervention rescued the behavioral response to stress in aged mice, not through amelioration of the inflammatory response, but by restoring the levels of key metabolites in the prefrontal cortex of aged animals. Therefore, dietary interventions could be a compelling avenue to improve the molecular and behavioral manifestations of chronic stress exposures in aging via targeting the microbiota-gut brain axis.
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spelling pubmed-97550602022-12-17 Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice Cruz-Pereira, Joana S. Moloney, Gerard M. Bastiaanssen, Thomaz F.S. Boscaini, Serena Tofani, Gabriel Borras-Bisa, Julia van de Wouw, Marcel Fitzgerald, Patrick Dinan, Timothy G. Clarke, Gerard Cryan, John F. Neurobiol Stress Original Research Article Aging has a significant impact on physiology with implications for central nervous system function coincident with increased vulnerability to stress exposures. A number of stress-sensitive molecular mechanisms are hypothesized to underpin age-related changes in brain function. Recent cumulative evidence also suggests that aging impacts gut microbiota composition. However, the impact of such effects on the ability of mammals to respond to stress in aging is still relatively unexplored. Therefore, in this study we assessed the ability of a microbiota-targeted intervention (the prebiotic FOS-Inulin) to alleviate age-related responses to stress. Exposure of aged C57BL/6 mice to social defeat led to an altered social interaction phenotype in the social interaction test, which was reversed by FOS-Inulin supplementation. Interestingly, this occured independent of affecting social defeat-induced elevations in the stress hormone corticosterone. Additionally, the behavioral modifications following FOS-Inulin supplementation were also not coincident with improvement of pro-inflammatory markers. Metabolomics analysis was performed and intriguingly, age associated metabolites were shown to be reduced in the prefrontal cortex of stressed aged mice and this deficit was recovered by FOS-Inulin supplementation. Taken together these results suggest that prebiotic dietary intervention rescued the behavioral response to stress in aged mice, not through amelioration of the inflammatory response, but by restoring the levels of key metabolites in the prefrontal cortex of aged animals. Therefore, dietary interventions could be a compelling avenue to improve the molecular and behavioral manifestations of chronic stress exposures in aging via targeting the microbiota-gut brain axis. Elsevier 2022-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9755060/ /pubmed/36532371 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2022.100501 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research Article
Cruz-Pereira, Joana S.
Moloney, Gerard M.
Bastiaanssen, Thomaz F.S.
Boscaini, Serena
Tofani, Gabriel
Borras-Bisa, Julia
van de Wouw, Marcel
Fitzgerald, Patrick
Dinan, Timothy G.
Clarke, Gerard
Cryan, John F.
Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
title Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
title_full Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
title_fullStr Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
title_full_unstemmed Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
title_short Prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
title_sort prebiotic supplementation modulates selective effects of stress on behavior and brain metabolome in aged mice
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9755060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36532371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2022.100501
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