Gut Dysbiosis: A Target for Protective Interventions against Parkinson's Disease.
Illyane S LimaAna Catarina PêgoAna-Catarina MartinsAna R PradaJoão Tomás BarrosGracelino MartinsRaffaella GozzelinoPublished in: Microorganisms (2023)
Sub-chronic inflammation, caused by age-related dysbiosis, primes the brain to neuroinflammation and neurodegenerative diseases. Evidence revealed that Parkinson's disease (PD) might originate in the gut, demonstrating gastro-intestinal disturbances, as reported by PD patients long before developing motor symptoms. In this study, we conducted comparative analyses in relatively young and old mice maintained in conventional or gnotobiotic conditions. We aimed to confirm that the effects induced by age-related dysbiosis, rather than aging itself, sensitize to PD onset. This hypothesis was confirmed in germ-free (GF) mice, which proved resistant to the pharmacological induction of PD, regardless of their age. Contrary to conventional animals, old GF mice did not develop an inflammatory phenotype or an accumulation of iron in the brain, two catalysts sensitizing to disease onset. The resistance of GF mice to PD is reverted when colonized with stool collected from conventional old animals, but not if receiving bacterial content from young mice. Hence, changes in gut microbiota composition are a risk factor for PD development and can be targeted preventively by iron chelators, shown to protect the brain from pro-inflammatory intestinal priming that sensitizes to neuroinflammation and the development of severe PD.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- white matter
- oxidative stress
- traumatic brain injury
- resting state
- type diabetes
- depressive symptoms
- newly diagnosed
- wild type
- cerebral ischemia
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- early onset
- ejection fraction
- functional connectivity
- prognostic factors
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cancer therapy
- highly efficient