Hyperammonemia induces gut microbiota dysbiosis and motor coordination disturbances in mice: new insight into gut‑brain axis involvement in hepatic encephalopathy
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Published:2023-06-30
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
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ISSN:1689-0035
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Container-title:Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis
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language:
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Short-container-title:Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars)
Author:
Abdelmohcine Aimrane,El Amine Souad,Warda Karima,El Baz Soraia,Khanouchi Manal,El‑Mansoury Bilal,Agnaou Mustapha,Smimih Kamal,Zouhairi Nadia,Chatoui Hicham,Draoui Ahmed,Saad Fatimazahra,My Ahmed Elamiri,Ferssiwi Abdessalam,Bitar Abdelali,Jayakumar Arumugam R.,Fdil Naima,El Hiba Omar
Abstract
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neuropsychiatric hepatic‑induced syndrome in which several factors are involved in promoting brain
perturbations, with ammonia being the primary factor. Motor impairment, incoordination, and gut dysbiosis are some of the well‑known
symptoms of HE. Nevertheless, the link between the direct effect of hyperammonemia and associated gut dysbiosis in the pathogenesis
of HE is not well established. Thus, this work aimed to assess motor function in hyperammonemia and gut dysbiosis in mice. Twenty‑eight
Swiss mice were distributed into three groups: two‑week and four‑week hyperammonemia groups were fed with an ammonia‑rich diet
(20% w/w), and the control group was pair‑fed with a standard diet. Motor performance in the three groups was measured through
a battery of motor tests, namely the rotarod, parallel bars, beam walk, and static bars. Microbial analysis was then carried out on the
intestine of the studied mice. The result showed motor impairments in both hyperammonemia groups. Qualitative and quantitative
microbiological analysis revealed decreased bacterial load, diversity, and ratios of both aerobic and facultative anaerobic bacteria,
following two and four weeks of ammonia supplementation. Moreover, the Shannon diversity index revealed a time‑dependent cutback
of gut bacterial diversity in a treatment‑time‑dependent manner, with the presence of only Enterobacteriaceae, Streptococcaceae, and
Enterococcaceaeat at four weeks. The data showed that ammonia‑induced motor coordination deficits may develop through direct and
indirect pathways acting on the gut‑brain axis.
Publisher
The Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Polish Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,General Neuroscience
Cited by
2 articles.
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