Affiliation:
1. Modern Research Centre for Traditional Chinese Medicine Shanxi University Taiyuan China
2. Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology and Molecular Engineering of Ministry of Education Shanxi University Taiyuan China
3. Key Laboratory of Effective Substances Research and Utilisation in Traditional Chinese Medicine of Shanxi Province Taiyuan China
Abstract
BackgroundDepressed patients are often accompanied with constipation symptoms, and vice versa. However, the underlying mechanisms of such a bidirectional correlation have remained elusive. We aim to reveal the possible correlations between depression and constipation from the perspectives of gut microbiome and plasma metabolome.MethodsWe constructed the depressed model and the constipated model of rats, respectively. First, we measured the locomotor activity status and the gastrointestinal functions of rats. And then, nuclear magnetic resonance plasma metabolomics was applied to reveal the shared and the unique metabolites of depression and constipation. In addition, 16 S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing was used to detect the impacts of constipation and depression on gut microbiota of rats. Finally, a multiscale and multifactorial network, that is, the ‘phenotypes ‐ differential metabolites ‐ microbial biomarkers’ integrated network, was constructed to visualise the mechanisms of connections between depression and constipation.ResultsWe found that spontaneous locomotor activity and gastrointestinal functions of both depressed rats and constipated rats significantly decreased. Further, eight metabolites and 14 metabolites were associated depression and constipation, respectively. Among them, seven metabolites and four metabolic pathways were shared by constipation and depression, mainly perturbing energy metabolism and amino acid metabolism. Additionally, depression and constipation significantly disordered the functions and the compositions of gut microbiota of rats, and decreased the ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes.ConclusionThe current findings provide multiscale and multifactorial perspectives for understanding the correlations between depression and constipation, and demonstrate new mechanisms of comorbidity of depression and constipation.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology