The gut microbiota metabolite indole increases emotional responses and adrenal medulla activity in chronically stressed male mice

•Chronic mild stress negatively affects emotional behaviors in gnotobiotic mice.•Microbial indole increases emotional responses to chronic mild stress.•Microbial indole influences catecholamine biosynthesis in the adrenal medulla. The gut microbiota produces metabolites that are an integral part of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychoneuroendocrinology 2020-09, Vol.119, p.104750-104750, Article 104750
Hauptverfasser: Mir, Hayatte-Dounia, Milman, Alexandre, Monnoye, Magali, Douard, Véronique, Philippe, Catherine, Aubert, Agnès, Castanon, Nathalie, Vancassel, Sylvie, Guérineau, Nathalie C., Naudon, Laurent, Rabot, Sylvie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Chronic mild stress negatively affects emotional behaviors in gnotobiotic mice.•Microbial indole increases emotional responses to chronic mild stress.•Microbial indole influences catecholamine biosynthesis in the adrenal medulla. The gut microbiota produces metabolites that are an integral part of the metabolome and, as such, of the host physiology. Changes in gut microbiota metabolism could therefore contribute to pathophysiological processes. We showed previously that a chronic and moderate overproduction of indole from tryptophan in male individuals of the highly stress-sensitive F344 rat strain induced anxiety-like and helplessness behaviors. The aim of the present study was to extend the scope of these findings by investigating whether emotional behaviors of male mice that are moderately stress-sensitive but chronically exposed to environmental stressors would also be affected by indole. We colonized germ-free male C3H/HeN mice with a wild-type indole-producing Escherichia coli strain, or with the non-indole producing mutant. Gnotobiotic mice were subjected to an unpredictable chronic mild stress procedure, then to a set of tests aimed at assessing anxiety-like (novelty and elevated plus maze tests) and depression-like behaviors (coat state, splash, nesting, tail suspension and sucrose tests). Results of the individual tests were aggregated into a common z-score to estimate the overall emotional response to chronic mild stress and chronic indole production. We also carried out biochemical and molecular analyses in gut mucosa, plasma, brain hippocampus and striatum, and adrenal glands, to examine biological correlates that are usually associated with stress, anxiety and depression. Chronic mild stress caused coat state degradation and anhedonia in both indole-producing and non-indole producing mice, but it did not influence behaviors in the other tests. Chronic indole production did not influence mice behavior when tests were considered individually, but it increased the overall emotionality z-score, specifically in mice under chronic mild stress. Interestingly, in the same mice, indole induced a dramatic increase of the expression of the adrenomedullary Pnmt gene, which is involved in catecholamine biosynthesis. By contrast, systemic tryptophan bioavailability, brain serotonin and dopamine levels and turnover, as well as expression of gut and brain genes involved in cytokine production and tryptophan metabolism along the serotonin and kynurenine path
ISSN:0306-4530
1873-3360
DOI:10.1016/j.psyneuen.2020.104750