Gut microbiome composition and diversity are related to human personality traits

Q1 Medicine
Katerina V.-A. Johnson
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引用次数: 103

Abstract

The gut microbiome has a measurable impact on the brain, influencing stress, anxiety, depressive symptoms and social behaviour. This microbiome–gut–brain axis may be mediated by various mechanisms including neural, immune and endocrine signalling. To date, the majority of research has been conducted in animal models, while the limited number of human studies has focused on psychiatric conditions. Here the composition and diversity of the gut microbiome is investigated with respect to human personality. Using regression models to control for possible confounding factors, the abundances of specific bacterial genera are shown to be significantly predicted by personality traits. Diversity analyses of the gut microbiome reveal that people with larger social networks tend to have a more diverse microbiome, suggesting that social interactions may shape the microbial community of the human gut. In contrast, anxiety and stress are linked to reduced diversity and an altered microbiome composition. Together, these results add a new dimension to our understanding of personality and reveal that the microbiome–gut–brain axis may also be relevant to behavioural variation in the general population as well as to cases of psychiatric disorders.

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肠道菌群的组成和多样性与人的人格特征有关
肠道微生物组对大脑有可测量的影响,影响压力、焦虑、抑郁症状和社交行为。这种微生物-肠-脑轴可能由多种机制介导,包括神经、免疫和内分泌信号。迄今为止,大多数研究都是在动物模型中进行的,而有限数量的人类研究主要集中在精神疾病上。在这里,肠道微生物组的组成和多样性的研究与人的个性有关。利用回归模型控制可能的混杂因素,表明人格特征显著预测特定细菌属的丰度。肠道微生物群的多样性分析表明,拥有更大社交网络的人往往拥有更多样化的微生物群,这表明社会互动可能会塑造人类肠道的微生物群落。相比之下,焦虑和压力与微生物多样性减少和微生物组成改变有关。总之,这些结果为我们对人格的理解增加了一个新的维度,并揭示了微生物群-肠-脑轴也可能与普通人群的行为变化以及精神疾病病例有关。
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来源期刊
Human Microbiome Journal
Human Microbiome Journal Medicine-Infectious Diseases
自引率
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期刊介绍: The innumerable microbes living in and on our bodies are known to affect human wellbeing, but our knowledge of their role is still at the very early stages of understanding. Human Microbiome is a new open access journal dedicated to research on the impact of the microbiome on human health and disease. The journal will publish original research, reviews, comments, human microbe descriptions and genome, and letters. Topics covered will include: the repertoire of human-associated microbes, therapeutic intervention, pathophysiology, experimental models, physiological, geographical, and pathological changes, and technical reports; genomic, metabolomic, transcriptomic, and culturomic approaches are welcome.
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