Modulation of gut microbiota composition due to early weaning stress induces depressive behavior during the juvenile period in mice

Author:

Kamimura Itsuka,Miyauchi Eiji,Takeuchi Tadashi,Tsuchiya Noriaki,Tamura Kanami,Uesugi Ayumi,Negishi Hiroki,Taida Takashi,Kato Tamotsu,Kawasumi Masami,Nagasawa Miho,Mogi Kazutaka,Ohno Hiroshi,Kikusui Takefumi

Abstract

Abstract Background The gut microbiota plays an important role in the development of behavior and immunity in infants and juveniles. Early weaning (EW), a form of social stress in mice, leads to increased anxiety and an enhanced stress response in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis during adulthood. Early life stress also modulates the immune system and increases vulnerability to infection. However, studies investigating the causal relationships among juvenile stress, microbiota changes, and immune and behavioral deficits are limited. Therefore, we hypothesized that EW alters gut microbiota composition and impairs the development of the nervous and immune systems. Results EW mice moved longer distances in the marble-burying test and had longer immobility times in the tail suspension test than normal weaning (NW) mice. In parallel, the gut microbiome composition differed between NW and EW mice, and the abundance of Erysipelotrichacea in EW mice at 8 weeks of age was lower than that in NW mice. In an empirical study, germ-free mice colonized with the gut microbiota of EW mice (GF-EW mice) demonstrated higher depressive behavior than GF mice colonized with normal weaning microbiota (GF-NW mice). Immune cell profiles were also affected by the EW microbiota colonization; the number of CD4 + T cells in the spleen was reduced in GF-EW mice. Conclusion Our results suggest that EW-induced alterations in the gut microbiota cause depressive behaviors and modulate the immune system.

Funder

Center for Human and Animal Symbiosis Science, Azabu University

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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