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Gut Microbiota-Derived Metabolites and Host Gut-Brain Communication
This special issue belongs to the section “Cellular Immunology“.
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The complex bidirectional communication system existing between the gastrointestinal tract and the brain, termed the “microbiota-gut-brain axis”, has a pivotal role in sustaining the host’s homeostasis.
The large community of microorganisms embedding the gut and the host organism are now considered as composite and co-evolved organisms. In this context, the integration of signals deriving from the host neuronal, immune, and endocrine systems with signals deriving from the microbiota underlays the establishment and maintenance of health, as well as the development of disease states, both locally and in more distal brain regions.
Among microbial metabolites, bile acids, short-chain fatty acids and tryptophan are detectable in different biological compartments, including feces and cerebrospinal fluid and exert important and diverse effects on host physiology, influencing the immune response, the integrity of the epithelial barrier to pathogen invasion, endocrine and neuronal functions giving rise to a microbiota-mediated bottom-up control of the central nervous system.
Research in this area opens the exciting possibility to target microbial metabolites to clarify the role of bacterial microbial flora in the pathogenesis of both gastrointestinal and brain disorders, as well as to discover new therapeutic strategies based on the administration of these “postbiotic” agents.
Dr. Cristina Giaroni
Dr. Andreina Baj
Collection Editors
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Keywords
- microbiota-gut-brain axis
- short-chain fatty acids
- microbiota-derived tryptophan metabolites
- secondary bile acids
- neuro-immune function
- microbiota-related gut disorders
- microbiota-related CNS disorders
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