Mycophenolate Improves Brain-Gut Axis Inducing Remodeling of Gut Microbiota in DOCA-Salt Hypertensive Rats.
Iñaki Robles-VeraNéstor de la VisitaciónManuel SánchezManuel Gómez-GuzmánRosario JiménezJavier MoleónCristina González-CorreaMiguel RomeroTao YangMohan K RaizadaMarta ToralJuan DuartePublished in: Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
Microbiota is involved in the host blood pressure (BP) regulation. The immunosuppressive drug mofetil mycophenolate (MMF) ameliorates hypertension. The present study analyzed whether MMF improves dysbiosis in mineralocorticoid-induced hypertension. Male Wistar rats were assigned to three groups: untreated (CTR), deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt, and DOCA treated with MMF for 4 weeks. MMF treatment reduced systolic BP, improved endothelial dysfunction, and reduced oxidative stress and inflammation in aorta. A clear separation in the gut bacterial community between CTR and DOCA groups was found, whereas the cluster belonging to DOCA-MMF group was found to be intermixed. No changes were found at the phylum level among all experimental groups. MMF restored the elevation in lactate-producing bacteria found in DOCA-salt joined to an increase in the acetate-producing bacteria. MMF restored the percentage of anaerobic bacteria in the DOCA-salt group to values similar to control rats. The improvement of gut dysbiosis was associated with an enhanced colonic integrity and a decreased sympathetic drive in the gut. MMF inhibited neuroinflammation in the paraventricular nuclei in the hypothalamus. This study demonstrates for the first time that MMF reduces gut dysbiosis in DOCA-salt hypertension models. This effect seems to be related to its capacity to improve gut integrity due to reduced sympathetic drive in the gut associated with reduced brain neuroinflammation.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- oxidative stress
- hypertensive patients
- traumatic brain injury
- heart rate
- diabetic rats
- type diabetes
- cognitive impairment
- resting state
- left ventricular
- metabolic syndrome
- emergency department
- microbial community
- adipose tissue
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- heavy metals
- drug induced
- skeletal muscle
- pulmonary hypertension
- liquid chromatography
- risk assessment
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- mass spectrometry
- endothelial cells
- lps induced
- combination therapy
- stress induced
- anaerobic digestion