iScience (May 2024)

Gut microbiota-derived cholic acid mediates neonatal brain immaturity and white matter injury under chronic hypoxia

  • Yichen Yan,
  • Xiaoli Zheng,
  • Gang Liu,
  • Guocheng Shi,
  • Cong Li,
  • Hongtong Chen,
  • Xiaomin He,
  • Kana Lin,
  • Zhaohui Deng,
  • Hao Zhang,
  • Wei-Guang Li,
  • Huiwen Chen,
  • Xiaoping Tong,
  • Zhongqun Zhu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 5
p. 109633

Abstract

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Summary: Chronic hypoxia, common in neonates, disrupts gut microbiota balance, which is crucial for brain development. This study utilized cyanotic congenital heart disease (CCHD) patients and a neonatal hypoxic rat model to explore the association. Both hypoxic rats and CCHD infants exhibited brain immaturity, white matter injury (WMI), brain inflammation, and motor/learning deficits. Through 16s rRNA sequencing and metabolomic analysis, a reduction in B. thetaiotaomicron and P. distasonis was identified, leading to cholic acid accumulation. This accumulation triggered M1 microglial activation and inflammation-induced WMI. Administration of these bacteria rescued cholic acid-induced WMI in hypoxic rats. These findings suggest that gut microbiota-derived cholic acid mediates neonatal WMI and brain inflammation, contributing to brain immaturity under chronic hypoxia. Therapeutic targeting of these bacteria provides a non-invasive intervention for chronic hypoxia patients.

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