Gut microbiota regulates innate anxiety through neural activity of medial prefrontal cortex in male mice
Jing Ren, Xiao-Ying Lian, Wan-Qian Ye, You-Lu Wen, Cheng-Lin Lu, Xiong Cao

TL;DR
The gut microbiota influences innate anxiety in male mice by affecting neural activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, offering new insights into microbiome-based treatments for anxiety.
Contribution
This study identifies a novel mechanism by which gut microbiota modulates innate anxiety through neural activity in the medial prefrontal cortex.
Findings
HA and LA mice have distinct gut microbial compositions.
FMT from HA donors induces anxiety-like behaviors and elevates c-FOS expression in brain regions like the mPFC.
Microbiota influences transcriptional changes and neuronal activity in the mPFC, linking gut and brain.
Abstract
Innate anxiety, a stable personality trait conceptualized as trait anxiety, represents a fundamental dimension of individual differences in emotional regulation. Clinical evidence and animal studies indicate that elevated innate anxiety significantly increases susceptibility to psychiatric disorders. While the gut microbiota has been increasingly recognized as a critical modulator of neuropsychiatric health, its specific contribution to innate anxiety has yet to be fully elucidated. We investigated gut microbiota contributions to innate anxiety in mice using stratified behavioral phenotyping in the elevated plus maze (EPM), antibiotic (ABX)-mediated microbiota depletion, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), c-FOS staining, transcriptomic profiling, and vivo fiber photometry. We found that innate high-anxiety (HA) and low-anxiety (LA) mice exhibited distinct gut microbial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Tryptophan and brain disorders · Neuroendocrine regulation and behavior
