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Article Publish Status: FREE
Abstract Title:

Oral Probiotics Ameliorate the Behavioral Deficits Induced by Chronic Mild Stress in Mice via the Gut Microbiota-Inflammation Axis.

Abstract Source:

Front Behav Neurosci. 2018 ;12:266. Epub 2018 Nov 6. PMID: 30459574

Abstract Author(s):

Nannan Li, Qi Wang, Yan Wang, Anji Sun, Yiwei Lin, Ye Jin, Xiaobai Li

Article Affiliation:

Nannan Li

Abstract:

In recent years, a burgeoning body of research has revealed links between depression and the gut microbiota, leading to the therapeutic use of probiotics for stress-related disorders. In this study, we explored the potential antidepressant efficacy of a multi-strain probiotics treatment (,, and) in a chronic mild stress (CMS) mouse model of depression and determined its probable mechanism of action. Our findings revealed that mice subjected to CMS exhibited anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors in the sucrose preference test, elevated plus maze, and forced swim test, along with increased interferon-γ, tumor necrosis factor-α, and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-1 levels in the hippocampus. Moreover, the microbiota distinctly changed from the non-stress group and was characterized by highly diverse bacterial communities associated with significant reductions inspecies. Probiotics attenuated CMS-induced anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors, significantly increasedabundance, and reversed the CMS-induced immune changes in the hippocampus. Thus, the possible mechanism involved in the antidepressant-like activity of probiotics is correlated withspecies via the gut microbiota-inflammation-brain axis.

Study Type : Animal Study

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