Sex Specific Effect Of Gut Microbiota On The Risk Of Psychiatric Disorders: A Mendelian Randomisation Study And Prs Analysis Using Uk Biobank Cohort

WORLD JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY(2021)

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摘要
ObjectiveThe relationships between gut microbiota and brain-related diseases/traits remains not fully understood.MethodA two-stage study was performed to investigate the relationships between gut microbiota and brain-related diseases/traits, and evaluate the potential sex specific effects of gut microbiota. In discovery stage, we systematically scanned the relationships between 515 brain-related diseases/traits and gut microbiota through two-sample Mendelian randomisation analysis. Using similar to 500,000 individuals derived from the UK Biobank, polygenetic risk scoring (PRS) analysis was performed to validate the associations detected in discovery stage. To evaluate the potential sex-specific effect of gut microbiota on brain-related disorders, PRS analysis was conducted in female and male, respectively.ResultsAfter systematically scanning diseases or traits, 41 of the 515 brain-related diseases/traits were identified to be associated with gut microbiota, such as Neuroticism score (P2-MR = 0.0018), worrier/anxious feelings (P2-MR = 0.0013), Suffer from 'nerves' (P2-MR = 0.0062) and Nervous feelings (P2-MR = 0.0158). 5 of 41 brain-related diseases or traits were successfully validated in UK Biobank, such as Neuroticism score (P-UK = 0.0024, PUK-female = 0.0063, PUK-male = 0.1142), Nervous feelings (P-UK = 0.0043, PUK-female = 0.0115, PUK-male = 0.1670) and Worrier/anxious feelings (P-UK = 0.0166, PUK-female = 0.0196, PUK-male = 0.2930).ConclusionOur results suggest that gut microbiota contributed more to brain-related diseases or traits in females than in males.
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关键词
Gut microbiota, brain, sex specific, psychiatric disorders, neurological disorders
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