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The Gut-Brain-Microbiome Axis and Its Link to Autism: Emerging Insights and the Potential of Zebrafish Models

机译:肠脑微生物轴及其与自闭症的联系:新兴洞察力和斑马鱼模型的潜力

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Research involving Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) most frequently focuses on its key diagnostic criteria: restricted interests and repetitive behaviors, altered sensory perception, and communication impairments. These core criteria, however, are often accompanied by numerous comorbidities, many of which result in severe negative impacts on quality of life, including seizures, epilepsy, sleep disturbance, hypotonia, and GI distress. While ASD is a clinically heterogeneous disorder, gastrointestinal (GI) distress is among the most prevalent co-occurring symptom complex, manifesting in upwards of 70% of all individuals with ASD. Consistent with this high prevalence, over a dozen family foundations that represent genetically distinct, molecularly-defined forms of ASD have identified GI symptoms as an understudied area with significant negative impacts on quality of life for both individuals and their caregivers. Moreover, GI symptoms are also correlated with more pronounced irritability, social withdrawal, stereotypy, hyperactivity, and sleep disturbances, suggesting that they may exacerbate the defining behavioral symptoms of ASD. Despite these facts (and to the detriment of the community), GI distress remains largely unaddressed by ASD research and is frequently regarded as a symptomatic outcome rather than a potential contributory factor to the behavioral phenotype. Allowing for examination of both ASD's impact on the central nervous system (CNS) as well as its impact on the GI tract and the associated microbiome, the zebrafish has recently emerged as a powerful tool to study ASD. This is in no small part due to the advantages zebrafish present as a model system: their precocious development, their small transparent larval form, and their parallels with humans in genetics and physiology. While ASD research centered on the CNS has leveraged these advantages, there has been a critical lack of GI-centric ASD research in zebrafish models, making a holistic view of the gut-brain-microbiome axis incomplete. Similarly, high-throughput ASD drug screens have recently been developed but primarily focus on CNS and behavioral impacts while potential GI impacts have not been investigated. In this review, we aim to explore the great promise of the zebrafish model for elucidating the roles of the gut-brain-microbiome axis in ASD.
机译:涉及自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的研究最常侧重于其关键诊断标准:限制利益和重复行为,改变感官感知和沟通障碍。然而,这些核心标准通常伴随着许多合并症,其中许多可能导致对生活质量的严重负面影响,包括癫痫发作,癫痫,睡眠障碍,低氧和GI痛苦。虽然ASD是临床异质疾病,但胃肠道(GI)痛苦是最普遍的共同发生的症状复合体,占据了70%的人的70%。与这种高流行率一致,在十几个家族基础上,代表基因截然不同的,分子定义形式的ASD已经确定了GI症状,作为一个被认为是对个人和护理人员的生活质量产生显着负面影响的区域。此外,GI症状也与更明显的烦躁,社交戒断,陈灶性,多动和睡眠紊乱相关,这表明它们可能会加剧亚本语的定义行为症状。尽管有这些事实(以及损害社区),GI痛苦仍然基本上被ASD研究尚未解决,并且经常被视为症状结果,而不是行为表型的潜在贡献因素。允许检查ASD对中枢神经系统(CNS)的影响以及其对GI道和相关的微生物组的影响,Zebrafish最近被成为研究ASD的强大工具。由于斑马鱼作为模型系统的优势:他们的早熟发展,他们的小透明幼虫形式以及与人类的遗传学和生理学中的平方根,这是没有的一小部分。虽然在CNS上集中的ASD研究已经利用了这些优势,但在斑马鱼型号中缺乏GI中心缺乏缺乏研究,使GUT-脑微生物轴不完整的整体视图。类似地,最近已经开发出高吞吐量ASD药物屏幕,但主要关注CNS和行为影响,而潜在的GI撞击尚未被调查。在这篇综述中,我们的目标是探讨斑马鱼模型的巨大希望,以阐明肠脑微生物轴在ASD中的作用。

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