4.7 Article

Microbiota Dysbiosis Controls the Neuroinflammatory Response after Stroke

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 28, Pages 7428-7440

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1114-16.2016

Keywords

inflammation; microbiota; stroke; T cells

Categories

Funding

  1. Excellence Cluster of the German Research Foundation Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy)
  2. [SPP1656]
  3. [STE 1971/4-1]

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Acute brain ischemia induces a local neuroinflammatory reaction and alters peripheral immune homeostasis at the same time. Recent evidence has suggested a key role of the gut microbiota in autoimmune diseases by modulating immune homeostasis. Therefore, we investigated the mechanistic link among acute brain ischemia, microbiota alterations, and the immune response after brain injury. Using two distinct models of acute middle cerebral artery occlusion, we show by next-generation sequencing that large stroke lesions cause gut microbiota dysbiosis, which in turn affects stroke outcome via immune-mediated mechanisms. Reduced species diversity and bacterial overgrowth of bacteroidetes were identified as hallmarks of poststroke dysbiosis, which was associated with intestinal barrier dysfunction and reduced intestinal motility as determined by in vivo intestinal bolus tracking. Recolonizing germ-free mice with dysbiotic poststroke microbiota exacerbates lesion volume and functional deficits after experimental stroke compared with the recolonization with a normal control microbiota. In addition, recolonization of mice with a dysbiotic microbiome induces a proinflammatory T-cell polarization in the intestinal immune compartment and in the ischemic brain. Using in vivo cell-tracking studies, we demonstrate the migration of intestinal lymphocytes to the ischemic brain. Therapeutic transplantation of fecal microbiota normalizes brain lesion-induced dysbiosis and improves stroke outcome. These results support a novel mechanism in which the gut microbiome is a target of stroke-induced systemic alterations and an effector with substantial impact on stroke outcome.

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