Gut microbiome in impulsively violent female convicts.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Michaela Langmajerová, Janet Ježková, Jakub Kreisinger, Jaroslav Semerád, Ivan Titov, Petra Procházková, Tomáš Cajthaml, Václav Jiřička, Jan Vevera, Radka Roubalová
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Abstract

Introduction Impulsivity and aggression are often interlinked behavioral traits that have major implications for our society. Therefore, the study of this phenomenon and derivative interventions that could lead to better control of impulsive aggression are of interest. Methods We analyzed the composition and diversity of the gut bacterial microbiome of 33 impulsively violent female convicts with dissocial personality disorder and 20 non-impulsive age-matched women. Further, levels of assorted neurotransmitters and short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) were analyzed in serum and stool samples. We also assessed all participants using a battery of psychological questionnaires and tested possible correlations between the collected clinical data and the composition and diversity of their microbiomes and metabolites. Results We identified four bacterial amplicon sequencing variants that were differentially abundant in non-impulsive vs. impulsive women - the genera Bacteroides, Barnesiella, and the order Rhodospirillales were more abundant in impulsive women. In contrast, the genus Catenisphaera was more abundant in non-impulsive women. Fecal tryptophan levels were significantly higher in impulsive women. Association analysis revealed a strong positive intercorrelation between most fecal short-chain fatty acids in the entire dataset. Conclusions Our study demonstrated possible associations between gut microbiomes and their metabolites and impulsive behavior in a unique cohort of prisoners convicted of violent assaults and a matched group of non-impulsive women from the same prison. Genus Bacteroides, which was differentially abundant in the two groups, encoded enzymes that affect serotonin pathways and could contribute to this maladaptive behavior. Similarly, increased fecal tryptophan levels in impulsive individuals could affect neuronal circuits in the brain.

冲动暴力女犯人的肠道微生物群。
导言 冲动和攻击往往是相互关联的行为特征,对我们的社会有着重大影响。因此,对这一现象的研究以及能更好地控制冲动性攻击行为的衍生干预措施很有意义。方法 我们分析了 33 名有冲动暴力倾向的异社会人格障碍女性罪犯和 20 名无冲动倾向的年龄匹配女性的肠道细菌微生物组的组成和多样性。此外,我们还分析了血清和粪便样本中各种神经递质和短链脂肪酸(SCFA)的水平。我们还使用一系列心理问卷对所有参与者进行了评估,并测试了所收集的临床数据与其微生物组和代谢物的组成和多样性之间可能存在的相关性。结果 我们发现了四种细菌扩增片段测序变体,它们在非冲动型女性和冲动型女性中的含量不同--冲动型女性中的巴氏菌属、巴氏菌属和Rhodospirillales目细菌含量更高。相比之下,Catenisphaera 属在非冲动型女性中含量更高。冲动型女性粪便中的色氨酸含量明显更高。关联分析表明,在整个数据集中,大多数粪便短链脂肪酸之间存在很强的正相关性。结论 我们的研究表明,在一个独特的暴力犯罪囚犯群组和来自同一监狱的非冲动型女性匹配群组中,肠道微生物组及其代谢物与冲动行为之间可能存在关联。乳酸菌属(Bacteroides)在两组中的含量不同,该菌编码的酶影响血清素通路,可能导致这种适应不良行为。同样,冲动型人群粪便中色氨酸含量的增加可能会影响大脑神经元回路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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