Reduced alcohol preference and intake after fecal transplant in patients with alcohol use disorder is transmissible to germ-free mice

Author:

Wolstenholme Jennifer T.ORCID,Saunders Justin M.,Smith Maren,Kang Jason D.,Hylemon Phillip B.,González-Maeso Javier,Fagan Andrew,Zhao Derrick,Sikaroodi Masoumeh,Herzog Jeremy,Shamsaddini Amirhossein,Peña-Rodríguez MarcelaORCID,Su Lianyong,Tai Yun-Ling,Zheng Jing,Cheng Po-Cheng,Sartor R. BalfourORCID,Gillevet Patrick M.ORCID,Zhou HuipingORCID,Bajaj Jasmohan S.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractAlcohol use disorder is a major cause of morbidity, which requires newer treatment approaches. We previously showed in a randomized clinical trial that alcohol craving and consumption reduces after fecal transplantation. Here, to determine if this could be transmitted through microbial transfer, germ-free male C57BL/6 mice received stool or sterile supernatants collected from the trial participants pre-/post-fecal transplant. We found that mice colonized with post-fecal transplant stool but not supernatants reduced ethanol acceptance, intake and preference versus pre-fecal transplant colonized mice. Microbial taxa that were higher in post-fecal transplant humans were also associated with lower murine alcohol intake and preference. A majority of the differentially expressed genes (immune response, inflammation, oxidative stress response, and epithelial cell proliferation) occurred in the intestine rather than the liver and prefrontal cortex. These findings suggest a potential for therapeutically targeting gut microbiota and the microbial-intestinal interface to alter gut-liver-brain axis and reduce alcohol consumption in humans.

Funder

McGuire Research Institute; no reference number

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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