Gut microbiota dysbiosis in Parkinson disease: A systematic review and pooled analysis

The role of the gut microbiome in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease (PD) is under intense investigation, and the results presented are still very heterogeneous. These discrepancies arise not only from the highly heterogeneous pathology of PD, but also from widely varying methodologies at all sta...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of neurology 2023-11, Vol.30 (11), p.3581-3594
Hauptverfasser: Kleine Bardenhorst, Sven, Cereda, Emanuele, Severgnini, Marco, Barichella, Michela, Pezzoli, Gianni, Keshavarzian, Ali, Desideri, Alessandro, Pietrucci, Daniele, Aho, Velma T E, Scheperjans, Filip, Hildebrand, Falk, Weis, Severin, Egert, Markus, Karch, André, Vital, Marius, Rübsamen, Nicole
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The role of the gut microbiome in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease (PD) is under intense investigation, and the results presented are still very heterogeneous. These discrepancies arise not only from the highly heterogeneous pathology of PD, but also from widely varying methodologies at all stages of the workflow, from sampling to final statistical analysis. The aim of the present work is to harmonize the workflow across studies to reduce the methodological heterogeneity and to perform a pooled analysis to account for other sources of heterogeneity. We performed a systematic review to identify studies comparing the gut microbiota of PD patients to healthy controls. A workflow was designed to harmonize processing across all studies from bioinformatics processing to final statistical analysis using a Bayesian random-effects meta-analysis based on individual patient-level data. The results show that harmonizing workflows minimizes differences between statistical methods and reveals only a small set of taxa being associated with the pathogenesis of PD. Increased shares of the genera Akkermansia and Bifidobacterium and decreased shares of the genera Roseburia and Faecalibacterium were most characteristic for PD-associated microbiota. Our study summarizes evidence that reduced levels of butyrate-producing taxa in combination with possible degradation of the mucus layer by Akkermansia may promote intestinal inflammation and reduced permeability of the gut mucosal layer. This may allow potentially pathogenic metabolites to transit and enter the enteric nervous system.
ISSN:1351-5101
1468-1331
DOI:10.1111/ene.15671