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Multi-omics approach identifies gut microbiota variations associated with depression - imarina:9452919

Autor/s de la URV:García Gavilán, Jesús Francisco / Salas Salvadó, Jorge
Autor segons l'article:Hernandez-Cacho, Adrian; Garcia-Gavilan, Jesus F; Atzeni, Alessandro; Konstanti, Prokopis; Belzer, Clara; Vioque, Jesus; Corella, Dolores; Fito, Montserrat; Vidal, Josep; Mela, Virginia; Liang, Liming; Torres-Collado, Laura; Coltell, Oscar; Babio, Nancy; Clish, Clary; Hernando-Redondo, Javier; Martinez-Gonzalez, Miguel A; Wang, Fenglei; Moreno-Indias, Isabel; Ni, Jiaqi; Dennis, Courtney; Ruiz-Canela, Miguel; Tinahones, Francisco J; Hu, Frank B; Salas-Salvado, Jordi
Adreça de correu electrònic de l'autor:jesusfrancisco.garcia@urv.cat
jesusfrancisco.garcia@urv.cat
jordi.salas@urv.cat
Identificador de l'autor:0000-0002-3707-5255
0000-0002-3707-5255
0000-0003-2700-7459
Any de publicació de la revista:2025
Tipus de publicació:Journal Publications
Referència a l'article segons font original:Npj Biofilms And Microbiomes. 11 (1): 68-
Resum:The gut microbiota plays a potential role in the pathophysiology of depression through the gut-brain axis. This cross-sectional study in 400 participants from the PREDIMED-Plus study investigates the interplay between gut microbiota and depression using a multi-omics approach. Depression was defined as antidepressant use or high Beck Depression Inventory-II scores. Gut microbiota was characterized by 16S rRNA sequencing, and faecal metabolites were analysed via liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Participants with depression exhibited significant differences in gut microbial composition and metabolic profiles. Differentially abundant taxa included Acidaminococcus, Christensenellaceae R-7 group, and Megasphaera, among others. Metabolomic analysis revealed 15 significantly altered metabolites, primarily lipids, organic acids, and benzenoids, some of which correlated with gut microbial features. This study highlights the interplay between the gut microbiota and depression, paving the way for future research to determine whether gut microbiota influences depression pathophysiology or reflects changes associated with depression.
DOI de l'article:10.1038/s41522-025-00707-9
Enllaç font original:https://www.nature.com/articles/s41522-025-00707-9
Versió de l'article dipositat:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Accès a la llicència d'ús:https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
Departament:Bioquímica i Biotecnologia
URL Document de llicència:https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Àrees temàtiques:Microbiology
Biotechnology & applied microbiology
Biotechnology
Applied microbiology and biotechnology
Paraules clau:Validity
Tryptophan
Tandem mass spectrometry
Symptom severity
Rna, ribosomal, 16s
Population
Multiomics
Middle aged
Metabolomics
Metabolome
Metabolism
Mediterranean diet
Male
Lif
Inflammation
Humans
Gene
Gastrointestinal microbiome
Female
Feces
Depression
Cross-sectional studies
Bacteria
Aged
Entitat:Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Data d'alta del registre:2025-05-12
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