Gut bacterial composition in a mouse model of Parkinson's disease

Publication date

2018-01-11

Authors

Pardo, Paula PerezISNI 0000000396807038
Dodiya, H.B.
Engen, P.A.
Naqib, A.
Forsyth, C.B.
Green, S.J.
Garssen, JohanORCID 0000-0002-8678-9182ISNI 0000000034097251
Keshavarzian, AliISNI 0000000352081204
Kraneveld, Aletta D.ISNI 000000038803088X

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Abstract

The mechanism of neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease (PD) remains unknown but it has been hypothesised that the intestinal tract could be an initiating and contributing factor to the neurodegenerative processes. In PD patients as well as in animal models for PD, alpha-synuclein-positive enteric neurons in the colon and evidence of colonic inflammation have been demonstrated. Moreover, several studies reported pro-inflammatory bacterial dysbiosis in PD patients. Here, we report for the first time significant changes in the composition of caecum mucosal associated and luminal microbiota and the associated metabolic pathways in a rotenone-induced mouse model for PD. The mouse model for PD, induced by the pesticide rotenone, is associated with an imbalance in the gut microbiota, characterised by a significant decrease in the relative abundance of the beneficial commensal bacteria genus Bifidobacterium. Overall, intestinal bacterial dysbiosis might play an important role in both the disruption of intestinal epithelial integrity and intestinal inflammation, which could lead or contribute to the observed alpha-synuclein aggregation and PD pathology in the intestine and central nervous system in the oral rotenone mouse model of PD.

Keywords

Caecum, Dysbiosis, Microbiota, Neurodegeneration, Rotenone, polyketide, protein ZO1, terpenoid, Actinobacteria, amino acid metabolism, amplicon, animal cell, animal experiment, animal model, animal tissue, article, Bacteroidetes, Bifidobacterium, bioinformatics, CD3+ T lymphocyte, cecum mucosa, community structure, controlled study, dopaminergic nerve cell, down regulation, dysbiosis, experimental parkinsonism, Firmicutes, intestine flora, lipid metabolism, male, metabolism, metabolite, microbial diversity, microglia, mouse, mouse model, nonhuman, protein expression, species richness, substantia nigra, taxon, upregulation, xenobiotic metabolism

Citation

Perez-Pardo, P, Dodiya, H B, Engen, P A, Naqib, A, Forsyth, C B, Green, S J, Garssen, J, Keshavarzian, A & Kraneveld, A D 2018, 'Gut bacterial composition in a mouse model of Parkinson's disease', Beneficial microbes, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 799-814. https://doi.org/10.3920/BM2017.0202