EBioMedicine (Nov 2015)

Risperidone-induced weight gain is mediated through shifts in the gut microbiome and suppression of energy expenditure

  • Sarah M. Bahr,
  • Benjamin J. Weidemann,
  • Ana N. Castro,
  • John W. Walsh,
  • Orlando deLeon,
  • Colin M.L. Burnett,
  • Nicole A. Pearson,
  • Daryl J. Murry,
  • Justin L. Grobe,
  • John R. Kirby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2015.10.018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 11
pp. 1725 – 1734

Abstract

Read online

Risperidone is a second-generation antipsychotic that causes weight gain. We hypothesized that risperidone-induced shifts in the gut microbiome are mechanistically involved in its metabolic consequences. Wild-type female C57BL/6J mice treated with risperidone (80 μg/day) exhibited significant excess weight gain, due to reduced energy expenditure, which correlated with an altered gut microbiome. Fecal transplant from risperidone-treated mice caused a 16% reduction in total resting metabolic rate in naïve recipients, attributable to suppression of non-aerobic metabolism. Risperidone inhibited growth of cultured fecal bacteria grown anaerobically more than those grown aerobically. Finally, transplant of the fecal phage fraction from risperidone-treated mice was sufficient to cause excess weight gain in naïve recipients, again through reduced energy expenditure. Collectively, these data highlight a major role for the gut microbiome in weight gain following chronic use of risperidone, and specifically implicates the modulation of non-aerobic resting metabolism in this mechanism.

Keywords