4.6 Article

Gut microbial dysbiosis after traumatic brain injury modulates the immune response and impairs neurogenesis

期刊

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40478-021-01137-2

关键词

Traumatic brain injury; Gut microbial dysbiosis; Antibiotics; Fear conditioning; Microglia; Monocytes; T cells; Neurogenesis

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01NS097721]
  2. Boehringer-Ingelheim, Germany
  3. Washington University School of Medicine
  4. Children's Discovery Institute of Washington University
  5. St. Louis Children's Hospital [CDI-CORE-2015-505, CDI-CORE-2019-813]
  6. Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital [3770, 4642]
  7. Office of Research Infrastructure Programs (ORIP), a part of the NIH Office of the Director [OD021629]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The gut microbiota has an unknown influence on traumatic brain injury (TBI), but antibiotic-induced dysbiosis before TBI can worsen neuronal loss and fear memory response. Antibiotic exposure after TBI also affects neuroinflammation, neurogenesis, and fear memory, suggesting gut microbial modulation as a potential therapeutic intervention for TBI.
The influence of the gut microbiota on traumatic brain injury (TBI) is presently unknown. This knowledge gap is of paramount clinical significance as TBI patients are highly susceptible to alterations in the gut microbiota by antibiotic exposure. Antibiotic-induced gut microbial dysbiosis established prior to TBI significantly worsened neuronal loss and reduced microglia activation in the injured hippocampus with concomitant changes in fear memory response. Importantly, antibiotic exposure for 1 week after TBI reduced cortical infiltration of Ly6C(high) monocytes, increased microglial pro-inflammatory markers, and decreased T lymphocyte infiltration, which persisted through 1 month post-injury. Moreover, microbial dysbiosis was associated with reduced neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus 1 week after TBI. By 3 months after injury (11 weeks after discontinuation of the antibiotics), we observed increased microglial proliferation, increased hippocampal neuronal loss, and modulation of fear memory response. These data demonstrate that antibiotic-induced gut microbial dysbiosis after TBI impacts neuroinflammation, neurogenesis, and fear memory and implicate gut microbial modulation as a potential therapeutic intervention for TBI.

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