Brain aging: Gut microbiome may drive memory loss via vagus nerve

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
A tomography brain scan to check for memory loss related changes on a hospital computer screenShare on Pinterest
Could the vagus nerve be key to reversing age-related memory loss? VILevi/Getty Images
  • A study in mice concludes that age-related loss in memory function may be driven by changes in the gut microbiome.
  • This effect is mediated by sensory neurons in the gut that contact the brain via the vagus nerve.
  • The scientists identified a mechanism by which gut-brain signals can impair memory formation in the hippocampus.
  • Importantly, the researchers also identified ways to reverse the decline in cognitive ability.

On average, human memory declines with age. However, there is substantial variation among individuals: some experience a rapid decline, whereas others barely notice a change.

With our rapidly aging population, understanding why some people are affected while others are not is important work.

A new animal study, published in Nature, concludes that memory problems associated with age may be driven by our gut and the bacteria that live within it.

In particular, the effect appears to depend on how the body perceives and responds to its internal environment, which is called interoception.

Their results may inform novel approaches to mitigating age-related memory deficits. Although the study is in animals, the results are likely to spark much more research.

Like many systems in the body, the gut microbiome slowly changes with age. The same is true in mice. For the first leg of the experiment, the scientists used various methods to alter a young mouse’s microbiome to more closely resemble that of an older mouse.

They did this, for instance, by using poop transplants or simply by housing a young mouse with an older mouse.

When a young mouse had an old microbiome, it exhibited cognitive decline similar to that observed in an older mouse. If it was then treated with antibiotics, which wiped out the microbiome, their cognitive abilities returned.

This evidence indicates that the microbiome contributes to memory decline with age. Next, they set out to identify which particular bacterial strains might be responsible. They concluded that the most likely candidate was Parabacteroides goldsteinii.

Then, they showed that harbouring an old microbiome, and specifically P. goldsteinii, was associated with altered neuronal responses in the hippocampus. They also noted concurrent changes in other brain regions that process sensory information. This, they theorized, might indicate that cognitive decline is related to disrupted interoception.

Using various techniques, the scientists eventually showed that the vagus nerve was the culprit. Specifically, it was a subtype of neurons called CCKAR+, which pass information from the gut to the hippocampus. These neurons respond to a gut peptide called cholecystokinin (CCK).

When the researchers treated old mice and young mice with old microbiomes with CCK, they recovered their cognitive abilities, becoming indistinguishable from control mice. The same effect was observed when they stimulated the vagus nerve with a GLP-1 receptor agonist, which is another gut peptide.

While this study was conducted in an animal model, the researchers’ thorough approach means we can be fairly confident that this is how it works in mice. That does not mean it is the same in humans, but it certainly opens the door to the possibility.

Medical News Today contacted Momo Vuyisich, PhD., founder and chief science officer of Viome and an adjunct professor at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, who was not involved in the study.

“Since intestinal biopsies and stool collections are commonly collected for medical and research purposes,” he told us, “these associations could easily be established in humans.”

He added that “a non-randomized control trial in humans has already shown cognitive improvements with fecal microbiota transplants,” so finding a similar relationship is certainly not in the realm of fantasy. However, he explained that replicating some parts of this study in humans would be “very challenging.”

We asked Vuyisich whether these findings could eventually lead to new approaches to slowing cognitive decline. He was hopeful and believed that food might hold some of the answers:

Scientists have already shown that the gut microbiome can have wide-ranging impacts on overall health, including brain health, so this at least provides a new avenue for exploring cognitive decline with age.

“Pharmacological activators of interoceptive pathways — which we refer to as interoceptomimetics may thus have the potential to stimulate sensory input into the brain to boost the formation of memory engrams in the hippocampus,” conclude the authors.

“Our findings call for the systematic exploration of possible interoceptomimetics and their impact on the aging brain,” they add.

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