Synthetic MC via Biological Transmitters: Therapeutic Modulation of the Gut-Brain Axis
Sebastian Lotter, Elisabeth Mohr, Andrina Rutsch, Lukas Brand, Francesca Ronchi, Laura D\'iaz-Marug\'an

TL;DR
This paper explores a novel approach to therapeutic modulation of the gut-brain axis using synthetic molecular communication, leveraging machine learning and personal health data to improve treatments for neurological diseases.
Contribution
It introduces a method to indirectly generate molecular signals via natural gut-brain pathways and develops a machine learning model to identify effective modulatory pathways with limited data.
Findings
High accuracy in identifying GBA modulators
Feasibility of using ML for GBA pathway analysis
Potential for personalized neurological treatments
Abstract
Synthetic molecular communication (SMC) is a key enabler for future healthcare systems in which Internet of Bio-Nano-Things (IoBNT) devices facilitate the continuous monitoring of a patient's biochemical signals. To close the loop between sensing and actuation, both the detection and the generation of in-body molecular communication (MC) signals is key. However, generating signals inside the human body, e.g., via synthetic nanodevices, poses a challenge in SMC, due to technological obstacles as well as legal, safety, and ethical issues. Hence, this paper considers an SMC system in which signals are generated indirectly via the modulation of a natural in-body MC system, namely the gut-brain axis (GBA). Therapeutic GBA modulation is already established as treatment for neurological diseases, e.g., drug refractory epilepsy (DRE), and performed via the administration of nutritional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Wireless Body Area Networks · Advanced Wireless Communication Technologies
