What is it about?
Research conducted in the past decade has established that the gut microbiota has far-reaching effects on the rest of the body – for example it can modify immune function, influence brain chemistry, and transform behaviour. The way in which gut microbes can exert these effects is by the modification of our blood chemistry by mixing their metabolites with our own. Here, we explored whether probiotic supplements, administered during pregnancy and nursing, would improve resilience to mood disorders in the offspring.
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Why is it important?
Alterations to the maternal gut microbiota caused by a high-fat diet not only affects the gut metabolite composition of the mother, but pervasively affect the gut and brain metabolism and anxiety-like behaviour of the adult offspring. The behavioural changes were prevented by providing the pregnant mice with a probiotic supplement during the critical period of foetal brain development. The researchers used a combination of gene-expression analysis and metabolomics (a method to quantify metabolites in a biological sample) to determine which specific factors were associated with these changes in behaviour. The results showed that administration of the probiotic to the mother significantly elevated the abundance of neuroactive metabolites in the gut and milk of the mothers during nursing. Some of these metabolites were also elevated in the offspring from mothers given the supplement, suggesting that modification of the maternal microbiota during pregnancy has direct and long-lasting effects on offspring metabolism. Elevated levels of brain lactate, a neuroactive substance, were correlated with reduced anxiety-like behaviour, suggesting that this molecule may be the source of the remedial effects of early-life probiotic exposure. The metabolic activity of cells in the brain called astrocytes, which are the equivalent of carers for neurons, was also enhanced by the treatment.
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This page is a summary of: Modifying the maternal microbiota alters the gut–brain metabolome and prevents emotional dysfunction in the adult offspring of obese dams, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, February 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108581119.
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