Association of aberrant brain network dynamics with gut microbial composition uncovers disrupted brain–gut–microbiome interactions in irritable bowel syndrome: Preliminary findings

Author:

Yang Lin1,Liu Guangyao23,Li Shan1,Yao Chaofan1,Zhao Ziyang1,Chen Nan1,Zhang Pengfei2,Shang Yingying1,Wang Yin1,Zhang Dekui4,Tian Xiaozhu5,Zhang Jing23,Yao Zhijun1,Hu Bin167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Gansu Provincial Key Laboratory of Wearable Computing, School of Information Science and Engineering Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

2. Department of Magnetic Resonance Lanzhou University Second Hospital Lanzhou China

3. Gansu Province Clinical Research Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging Lanzhou China

4. Department of Gastroenterology Lanzhou University Second Hospital Lanzhou China

5. National Demonstration Center for Experimental Biology Education, School of Life Science Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

6. Joint Research Center for Cognitive Neurosensor Technology of Lanzhou University & Institute of Semiconductors Chinese Academy of Sciences Lanzhou China

7. Engineering Research Center of Open Source Software and Real‐Time System (Lanzhou University) Ministry of Education Lanzhou China

Abstract

AbstractBackground and purposeGrowing evidence suggests that abnormalities in brain–gut–microbiome (BGM) interactions are involved in the pathogenesis of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Our study aimed to explore alterations in dynamic functional connectivity (DFC), the gut microbiome and the bidirectional interaction in the BGM.MethodsResting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs‐fMRI), fecal samples and clinical chacteristics were collected from 33 IBS patients and 32 healthy controls. We performed a systematic DFC analysis on rs‐fMRI. The gut microbiome was analyzed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Associations between DFC characteristics and microbial alterations were explored.ResultsIn the DFC analysis, four dynamic functional states were identified. IBS patients exhibited increased mean dwell and fraction time in State 4, and reduced transitions from State 3 to State 1. Aberrant temporal properties in State 4 were only evident when choosing a short window (36 s or 44 s). Decreased functional connectivity (FC) variability was found in State 1 and State 3 in IBS patients, two of which (independent component [IC]51‐IC91, IC46‐IC11) showed significant correlations with clinical characteristics. Additionally, we identified nine significantly differential abundances in microbial composition. We also found that IBS‐related microbiota were associated with aberrant FC variability, although these exploratory results were obtained at an uncorrected threshold of significance.ConclusionsAlthough future studies are needed to confirm our results, the findings not only provide a new insight into the dysconnectivity hypothesis in IBS from a dynamic perspective, but also establish a possible link between DFC and the gut microbiome, which lays the foundation for future research on disrupted BGM interactions.

Funder

National Basic Research Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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