It is becoming well established that the gut microbiome has a profound impact on human health and disease. In this review, we explore how steroids can influence the gut microbiota and, in turn, how the gut microbiota can influence hormone levels.Within the context of the gut microbiome-brain axis, we discuss how perturbations in the gut microbiota can alter the stress axis and behaviour. In addition, human studies on the possible role of gut microbiota in depression and anxiety are examined. Finally, we present some of the challenges and important questions that need to be addressed by future research in this exciting new area at the intersection of steroids, stress, gutbrain axis and human health.
K E Y W O R D Sandrogen, microbiota, oestrogen, steroid hormones, stress
| INTRODUCTIONWithin each human gastrointestinal tract, there is an exclusive combination of different communities of organisms, including bacteria, viruses, archaea, protozoa and fungi, which are collectively referred to as the gut microbiota and outnumber the total amount of human cells in the human body.1 The collection of these microorganisms, their genomes and the factors that they produce are all part of the gut microbiome. 2 Increasing evidence suggests that these microorganisms actively participate in shaping and maintaining our physiology almost as an extra organ. ranging from obesity 7 and asthma 8 to a variety of brain disorders.
3,9-14The gut microbiota helps break down food and, in doing so, produces metabolites that can directly influence the physiology of host cells, including brain cells. Moreover, immune responses to pathogenic bacteria produce cytokines and lymphokines that can affect brain physiology.
15Because the nervous system is a master regulator of host function, this allows microbes to influence a broad range of complex physiologicalprocesses. An improved mechanistic understanding of how bacterial molecules act on the nervous system could yield improved therapeutics for treating behavioural and neurological disorders.
16The human gut microbiota is usually stable and resilient to transient perturbations. 17 However, microbial composition or activity of the gut can be modified by a variety of factors, including internal factors such as hormonal changes, or external factors such as diet, antibiotics and stress. 3,18 In this review, the influence of steroids and stress on the gut microbiome-brain axis is discussed, as well as the challenges that face future research in this area.
| STEROID HORMONES INFLUENCE THE GUT MICROBIOTAThere is mounting evidence that steroid hormones can affect the gut microbiota. In support of steroids influencing the gut bacterial communities, sex differences have been noted in the composition of the gut microbiota, with specific phyla, family and genera variances occurring with clear effects of gonadectomy and hormone replacement on gut bacteria in rodents. [19][20][21] In mice, the sex differences in the gut microbiota observed between males and females are decreased after castration, indicating a...