EBioMedicine (Oct 2017)

Microbiota-related Changes in Bile Acid & Tryptophan Metabolism are Associated with Gastrointestinal Dysfunction in a Mouse Model of Autism

  • Anna V. Golubeva,
  • Susan A. Joyce,
  • Gerard Moloney,
  • Aurelijus Burokas,
  • Eoin Sherwin,
  • Silvia Arboleya,
  • Ian Flynn,
  • Dmitry Khochanskiy,
  • Angela Moya-Pérez,
  • Veronica Peterson,
  • Kieran Rea,
  • Kiera Murphy,
  • Olga Makarova,
  • Sergey Buravkov,
  • Niall P. Hyland,
  • Catherine Stanton,
  • Gerard Clarke,
  • Cormac G.M. Gahan,
  • Timothy G. Dinan,
  • John F. Cryan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2017.09.020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. C
pp. 166 – 178

Abstract

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Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is one of the most prevalent neurodevelopmental conditions worldwide. There is growing awareness that ASD is highly comorbid with gastrointestinal distress and altered intestinal microbiome, and that host-microbiome interactions may contribute to the disease symptoms. However, the paucity of knowledge on gut-brain axis signaling in autism constitutes an obstacle to the development of precision microbiota-based therapeutics in ASD. To this end, we explored the interactions between intestinal microbiota, gut physiology and social behavior in a BTBR T+ Itpr3tf/J mouse model of ASD. Here we show that a reduction in the relative abundance of very particular bacterial taxa in the BTBR gut – namely, bile-metabolizing Bifidobacterium and Blautia species, - is associated with deficient bile acid and tryptophan metabolism in the intestine, marked gastrointestinal dysfunction, as well as impaired social interactions in BTBR mice. Together these data support the concept of targeted manipulation of the gut microbiota for reversing gastrointestinal and behavioral symptomatology in ASD, and offer specific plausible targets in this endeavor.

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