Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Gut Microbiome–Brain Alliance: A Landscape View into Mental and Gastrointestinal Health and Disorders

Janet M. Sasso, Ramy M. Ammar, Rumiana Tenchov, S. A. Lemmel, O Kelber, Malte Grieswelle, Qiongqiong Angela Zhou

ACS Chemical Neuroscience · 2023

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Summary

Gut microbiota includes a vast collection of microorganisms residing within the gastrointestinal tract. It is broadly recognized that the gut and brain are in constant bidirectional communication, of which gut microbiota and its metabolic production are a major component, and form the so-called gut microbiome-brain axis. Disturbances of microbiota homeostasis caused by imbalance in their functional composition and metabolic activities, known as dysbiosis, cause dysregulation of these pathways and trigger changes in the blood-brain barrier permeability, thereby causing pathological malfunctions, including neurological and functional gastrointestinal disorders. In turn, the brain can affect the structure and function of gut microbiota through the autonomic nervous system by regulating gut mo

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00127
Catalogue ID
SNmojuotom-dnwf3c
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