Scientific Reports (Aug 2023)

Role of mucin glycosylation in the gut microbiota-brain axis of core 3 O-glycan deficient mice

  • Erika Coletto,
  • George M. Savva,
  • Dimitrios Latousakis,
  • Matthew Pontifex,
  • Emmanuelle H. Crost,
  • Laura Vaux,
  • Andrea Telatin,
  • Kirk Bergstrom,
  • David Vauzour,
  • Nathalie Juge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-40497-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Alterations in intestinal mucin glycosylation have been associated with increased intestinal permeability and sensitivity to inflammation and infection. Here, we used mice lacking core 3-derived O-glycans (C3GnT−/−) to investigate the effect of impaired mucin glycosylation in the gut-brain axis. C3GnT−/− mice showed altered microbial metabolites in the caecum associated with brain function such as dimethylglycine and N-acetyl-l-tyrosine profiles as compared to C3GnT+/+ littermates. In the brain, polysialylated-neural cell adhesion molecule (PSA-NCAM)-positive granule cells showed an aberrant phenotype in the dentate gyrus of C3GnT−/− mice. This was accompanied by a trend towards decreased expression levels of PSA as well as ZO-1 and occludin as compared to C3GnT+/+. Behavioural studies showed a decrease in the recognition memory of C3GnT−/− mice as compared to C3GnT+/+ mice. Combined, these results support the role of mucin O-glycosylation in the gut in potentially influencing brain function which may be facilitated by the passage of microbial metabolites through an impaired gut barrier.