Abstract
Acute stress can enhance or impair synaptic plasticity depending on the nature, duration, and type of stress exposure as well as the brain region examined. The absence of a gut microbiome can also alter hippocampal plasticity. However, the possible interplay between synaptic plasticity, acute stress, and the gut microbiota remains unknown. Here, we examine this interaction and determine whether the gut microbiota impacts stress-induced alterations in hippocampal plasticity. Further, we explored whether exposure to the microbial metabolite butyrate is sufficient to counteract stress-induced alterations in synaptic plasticity. We used electrophysiological and molecular experiments in adult male C57/BL6 antibiotic-treated and acutely stressed mice. In electrophysiological experiments we treated hippocampal slices with 3 μM sodium butyrate to explore the effect of this microbial metabolite. We found the presence of the microbiota essential for the enhancement of both short- and long-term potentiation induced by 15 min of acute restraint stress. Furthermore, butyrate exposure effectively restored the stress-induced enhancement of potentiation in slices from microbiome-depleted animals while also enhancing long-term potentiation independent of stress. In addition, alterations of hippocampal synaptic plasticity markers were noted. Our findings highlight a critical new temporal role for gut-derived metabolites in defining the impact of acute stress on synaptic plasticity.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 110434 |
| Journal | Neuropharmacology |
| Volume | 273 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Aug 2025 |
Keywords
- Acute stress
- Gut-brain axis
- Microbiota
- Synaptic plasticity
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