Gut microbiota regulates stress responsivity via the circadian system
University College Cork · APC Microbiome Institute
Abstract
Stress and circadian systems are interconnected through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis to maintain responses to external stimuli. Yet, the mechanisms of how such signals are orchestrated remain unknown. Here, we uncover the gut microbiota as a regulator of HPA-axis rhythmicity. Microbial depletion disturbs the brain transcriptome and metabolome in stress-responding pathways in the hippocampus and amygdala across the day. This is coupled with a dysregulation of the circadian pacemaker in the brain that results in perturbed glucocorticoid rhythmicity. The resulting hyper-activation of the HPA axis at the sleep/wake transition drives time-of-day-specific impairments of the stress response and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 88
Authors
8- GTG. Tofani
University College Cork, APC Microbiome Institute
- SLSarah‐Jane Leigh
University College Cork, APC Microbiome Institute
- CECassandra E. Gheorghe
University College Cork, APC Microbiome Institute
- TFThomaz F. S. Bastiaanssen
University College Cork, APC Microbiome Institute
- LWLars Wilmes
University College Cork
Topics & keywords
- Circadian rhythm
- Gut flora
- Biology
- Responsivity
- Stress (linguistics)
- Cell biology
- Neuroscience
- Immunology
- Zero hunger