Abstract
The gut microbiome is thought to play a critical role in the onset and development of psychiatric disorders, including depression and substance use disorder (SUD). To test the hypothesis that the microbiome affects addiction predisposing behaviors and cocaine intravenous self-administration (IVSA) and to identify specific microbes involved in the relationship, we performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing on feces from 228 diversity outbred mice. Twelve open field measures, two light-dark assay measures, one hole board and novelty place preference measure significantly differed between mice that acquired cocaine IVSA (ACQ) and those that failed to acquire IVSA (FACQ). We found that ACQ mice are more active and exploratory and display decreased fear than FACQ mice. The microbial abundances that differentiated ACQ from FACQ mice were an increased abundance of Barnesiella, Ruminococcus, and Robinsoniella and decreased Clostridium IV in ACQ mice. There was a sex-specific correlation between ACQ and microbial abundance, a reduced Lactobacillus abundance in ACQ male mice, and a decreased Blautia abundance in female ACQ mice. The abundance of Robinsoniella was correlated, and Clostridium IV inversely correlated with the number of doses of cocaine self-administered during acquisition. Functional analysis of the microbiome composition of a subset of mice suggested that gut-brain modules encoding glutamate metabolism genes are associated with the propensity to self-administer cocaine. These findings establish associations between the microbiome composition and glutamate metabolic potential and the ability to acquire cocaine IVSA thus indicating the potential translational impact of targeting the gut microbiome or microbial metabolites for treatment of SUD.
HIGHLIGHTS
Correlational analysis of novelty behaviors to IVSA acquisition shows that mice that acquire cocaine IVSA are more active and exploratory and have decreased fear than those that failed-to-acquire IVSA.
The gut microbiome profiling of 228 diversity outbred mice indicates the relative abundances of Barnesiella, Ruminococcus, Robinsoniella and Clostridium IV are associated with the ability to self-administer cocaine.
Associations between the gut microbiome and IVSA acquisition are sex-specific. Decreased relative abundances of Lactobacillus and Blautia are associated with IVSA in male and female mice, respectively.
The relative abundances of Robinsoniella and Clostridium IV were correlated with the number of infusions of self-administered cocaine.
Functional potential analysis of the gut microbiome supports a role for microbiomes encoding glutamate metabolism in the ability to self-administer cocaine.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
ABBREVIATIONS
- DO
- diversity outbred;
- IVSA
- intravenous self-administration;
- OTU
- operational taxonomic unit.
- PICRUSt
- Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States
- SCFA
- short chain fatty acids;
- WGS
- whole genome sequencing;
- ACQ-Acquired
- cocaine self-administration phenotype;
- FACQ
- (Failed to acquire cocaine self-administration behavior);
- KO-KEGG
- Orthology, GBM gut-brain modules