Sleep promoting and omics exploration on probiotics fermented Gastrodia elata Blume.
Chao-Qi ZhangXu-Dong ZhangYan WangYi-Han LiuCun-Li ZhangQiang ZhangPublished in: NPJ science of food (2024)
Fermenting Chinese medicinal herbs could enhance their bioactivities. We hypothesized probiotic-fermented gastrodia elata Blume (GE) with better potential to alleviate insomnia than that of unfermented, thus the changes in chemical composition and the insomnia-alleviating effects and mechanisms of fermented GE on pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-induced insomnia zebrafish were explored via high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and mass spectroscopy-coupled HPLC (HPLC-MS), phenotypic, transcriptomic, and metabolomics analysis. The results demonstrated that probiotic fermented GE performed better than unfermented GE in increasing the content of chemical composition, reducing the displacement, average speed, and number of apoptotic cells in zebrafish with insomnia. Metabolomic investigation showed that the anti-insomnia effect was related to regulating the pathways of actin cytoskeleton and neuroactive ligand-receptor interactions. Transcriptomic and reverse transcription qPCR (RT-qPCR) analysis revealed that secondary fermentation liquid (SFL) significantly modulated the expression levels of neurod1, msh2, msh3, recql4, ercc5, rad5lc, and rev3l, which are mainly involved in neuron differentiation and DNA repair. Collectively, as a functional food, fermented GE possessed potential for insomnia alleviation.
Keyphrases
- high performance liquid chromatography
- dna repair
- lactic acid
- simultaneous determination
- mass spectrometry
- sleep quality
- ms ms
- solid phase extraction
- tandem mass spectrometry
- dna damage
- single cell
- liquid chromatography
- cell death
- human health
- physical activity
- poor prognosis
- high resolution
- dna damage response
- rna seq
- depressive symptoms
- high glucose
- risk assessment
- gas chromatography
- single molecule
- bacillus subtilis
- transcription factor