The effect of prenatal stress on offspring depression susceptibility in relation to the gut microbiome and metabolome

Prenatal stress (PS) increases offspring susceptibility to depression, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Our previous results showed that PS can affect depression-like behavior in offspring through neurotransmitters and neuroinflammatory substances in the hippocampus and frontal cortex....

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of affective disorders Vol. 339; pp. 531 - 537
Main Authors Li, Qinghong, Sun, Hongli, Guo, Jinzhen, Zhao, Xiaolin, Bai, Ruimiao, Zhang, Min, Liu, Minna
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15.10.2023
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Summary:Prenatal stress (PS) increases offspring susceptibility to depression, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Our previous results showed that PS can affect depression-like behavior in offspring through neurotransmitters and neuroinflammatory substances in the hippocampus and frontal cortex. In recent years there has been increasing evidence for a role of the gut microbiome in depression. The brain-gut axis theory suggests there is a need to further explore the mechanism involving the gut microbiome in the susceptibility of offspring to depression caused by PS. In the present study we used a stress model relevant to depression in which pregnant female rats undergo prenatal restraint stress and the offspring show susceptibility to depression. High-resolution gene sequencing for 16S ribosomal RNA markers and non-targeted metabolomic analysis were used to evaluate the fecal microbiome and the availability of metabolites, respectively. PS was found to induce depressive-like behavior in susceptible offspring (PS-S), as detected by the sucrose preference and forced swimming tests, as well as altering Alpha and Beta diversity. The different microbiota between the PS-S and control groups were mainly involved in membrane transport, carbohydrate metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and replication and repair pathways. In total, 237 and 136 important differential metabolites with significant influence on modeling analysis were obtained under positive and negative modes, respectively. The main canonical pathways found to be altered were glycerophospholipid metabolism and glycerolipid metabolism. These results suggest that gut microbiota might contribute to the onset of PS-induced depression-like behavior by affecting the glycerophospholipid and glycerolipid metabolic pathways. •Prenatal stress induced depressive-like behaviors in offspring.•Alpha diversity and Beta diversity were changed by PS.•Gut microbiota might contribute to the onset of depression-like behavior.
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ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2023.07.089