Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (Mar 2023)

Alteration of the gut microbiome and correlated metabolism in a rat model of long-term depression

  • Yubo Li,
  • Junling Li,
  • Ran Cheng,
  • Haixia Liu,
  • Yukun Zhao,
  • Yanjun Liu,
  • Yanjing Chen,
  • Zhibo Sun,
  • Zhiguang Zhai,
  • Meng Wu,
  • Yupeng Yan,
  • Yuxiu Sun,
  • Zhiguo Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2023.1116277
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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ObjectiveThis study aims to investigate the composition and function of the gut microbiome in long-term depression using an 8-week chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) rat model.Materials and methodsAnimals were sacrificed after either 4 weeks or 8 weeks under CUMS to mimic long-term depression in humans. The gut microbiome was analyzed to identify potential depression-related gut microbes, and the fecal metabolome was analyzed to detect their functional metabolites. The correlations between altered gut microbes and metabolites in the long-term depression rats were explored. The crucial metabolic pathways related to long-term depression were uncovered through enrichment analysis based on these gut microbes and metabolites.ResultsThe microbial composition of long-term depression (8-week CUMS) showed decreased species richness indices and different profiles compared with the control group and the 4-week CUMS group, characterized by disturbance of Alistipes indistinctus, Bacteroides ovatus, and Alistipes senegalensis at the species level. Additionally, long-term depression was associated with disturbances in fecal metabolomics. D-pinitol was the only increased metabolite in the 8-week CUMS group among the top 10 differential metabolites, while the top 3 decreased metabolites in the long-term depression rats included indoxyl sulfate, trimethylaminen-oxide, and 3 alpha,7 alpha-dihydroxy-12-oxocholanoic acid. The disordered fecal metabolomics in the long-term depression rats mainly involved the biosynthesis of pantothenate, CoA, valine, leucine and isoleucine.ConclusionOur findings suggest that the gut microbiome may participate in the long-term development of depression, and the mechanism may be related to the regulation of gut metabolism.

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