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Integrated multi-omics analysis reveals gut microbiota dysbiosis and systemic disturbance in major depressive disorder.

Authors :
Xie, Zuoquan
Huang, Jingjing
Sun, Guangqiang
He, Shen
Luo, Zhiyu
Zhang, Linna
Li, Liang
Yao, Min
Du, Chen
Yu, Wenjuan
Feng, Yuan
Yang, Dabing
Zhang, Jing
Ge, Changrong
Li, Huafang
Geng, Meiyu
Source :
Psychiatry Research. Apr2024, Vol. 334, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• MDD has substantial changes in the structure and function of gut microbiota. • MDD exhibited decreased amino acids and bile acids and increased lipids in blood. • The changes of blood immune cell subtypes of MDD tend to promote inflammation. • MDD could be divided into two immune subtypes, and one is correlated with relapse. • We revealed integrative discriminative signatures for distinguishing MDD from HC. Major depressive disorder (MDD) involves systemic changes in peripheral blood and gut microbiota, but the current understanding is incomplete. Herein, we conducted a multi-omics analysis of fecal and blood samples obtained from an observational cohort including MDD patients (n = 99) and healthy control (HC, n = 50). 16S rRNA sequencing of gut microbiota showed structural alterations in MDD, as characterized by increased Enterococcus. Metagenomics sequencing of gut microbiota showed substantial functional alterations including upregulation in the superpathway of the glyoxylate cycle and fatty acid degradation and downregulation in various metabolic pathways in MDD. Plasma metabolomics revealed decreased amino acids and bile acids, together with increased sphingolipids and cholesterol esters in MDD. Notably, metabolites involved in arginine and proline metabolism were decreased while sphingolipid metabolic pathway were increased. Mass cytometry analysis of blood immune cell subtypes showed rises in proinflammatory immune subsets and declines in anti-inflammatory immune subsets in MDD. Furthermore, our findings revealed disease severity-related factors of MDD. Interestingly, we classified MDD into two immune subtypes that were highly correlated with disease relapse. Moreover, we established discriminative signatures that differentiate MDD from HC. These findings contribute to a comprehensive understanding of the MDD pathogenesis and provide valuable resources for the discovery of biomarkers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01651781
Volume :
334
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Psychiatry Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176070115
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2024.115804