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Medicine Science

A Baffling Brain Defect Is Linked to Gut Bacteria, Scientists Say (sciencealert.com) 55

Gina Kolata from The New York Times writes about a baffling brain disorder that is linked to a particular type of bacteria living in the gut (Warning: source may be paywalled; alternate source) The new study, published on Wednesday in Nature, is among the first to suggest convincingly that these bacteria may initiate disease in seemingly unrelated organs, and in completely unexpected ways. The researchers studied hereditary cerebral cavernous malformations -- blood-filled bubbles that protrude from veins in the brain and can leak blood or burst at any time. When Dr. Mark Kahn, professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine, began this work, the microbiome was the last thing on his mind. Dr. Kahn and his colleagues studied cerebral cavernous malformations as part of a larger effort to understand the development and function of blood vessels. Three genes have been linked to the disorder, and Dr. Kahn and his colleagues tried to figure out what these mutations really do. The scientists were able to mimic the condition in mice by deleting a gene that is mutated in many patients. A year ago, the scientists moved to a new building, and something unexpected happened. The experimental mice stopped developing the brain malformations. Dr. Kahn's student, Alan T. Tang, had been deleting the gene by injecting a drug into the abdomens of the mice. Sometimes a mouse would get an infection that would lead to an abscess, and bacteria leaked from the gut into the blood. In the new building, only those mice still developed the brain defect. The other gene-deleted mice did not. He and his colleagues finally identified the culprit: Gram-negative bacteria, named for the way they stain, that carry a molecule in their cell walls, a lipopolysaccharide. Without a functioning gene, the lipopolysaccharide can signal veins in the brain to form blood bubbles.
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A Baffling Brain Defect Is Linked to Gut Bacteria, Scientists Say

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  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @11:40PM (#54397753)

    A Baffling Brain Defect Is Linked to LinkedIn...

    I knew was something wrong with the people that use LinkedIn! ;)

  • Curious if we have a similar cause from Parkinson's or ALS, the later of which has seemingly no identifiable congenital cause.

    I recall when nobody knew that bacteria caused ulcers, and this was long after we knew about bacteria.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @12:38AM (#54397919)

      Parkinson's has some connections to the gut. For instance, it is correlated with constipation. Also people who drink a lot of coffee or tea are less likely to be afflicted. But I don't think it is cause by bacteria, because there is no cure. If gut bacteria caused the disease, some people would be cured inadvertently when they take high doses of antibiotics for other reasons, and that doesn't happen.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Alternatively, what if taking antibiotics wipes out good intestinal flora, resulting in these maladies in some patients? Diet can also affect intestinal flora, so that is a factor to consider too. Perhaps a poor diet wipes out the good bacteria or causes the bacteria to generate harmful waste products?

        I think scientists have yet to discover the full extent of intestinal flora's relationship with overall bodily health and mental health (I think the enteric nervous system plays a role in the latter as well).

        • Or even like in this case where there's a genetic cause and a gut flora cause. It takes both scenarios in combination to cause the disease, which is why it's hard to reproduce an exact cause.

        • This. (I don't know why you were downvoted, I think you're right on target.)

          Let's just look at something that's seemingly common: fiber. About 97% of the US doesn't eat their daily recommended amount of fiber. What do the good flora like to eat? Fiber.

          And this isn't to say Parkinson's (and other diseases) can be cured this way, but may be alleviated in some ways (which can still be really meaningful) with a more positive gut situation....and in a really easy way.

      • by Alsn ( 911813 )
        <quote><p> But I don't think it is cause by bacteria, because there is no cure. If gut bacteria caused the disease, some people would be cured inadvertently when they take high doses of antibiotics for other reasons, and that doesn't happen.</p></quote>

        As a medical student I can say that while common sense and gut feeling would seemingly agree with you, the science of how our bodies work does not. Bacteria do not have to be directly present in order to cause problems. As an example
      • Parkinson's has some connections to the gut. For instance, it is correlated with constipation. Also people who drink a lot of coffee or tea are less likely to be afflicted. But I don't think it is cause by bacteria, because there is no cure. If gut bacteria caused the disease, some people would be cured inadvertently when they take high doses of antibiotics for other reasons, and that doesn't happen.

        Damage caused by bacteria could be irreversible. So even if you kill the germs, the damage remains, incurable.

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @12:18AM (#54397849) Journal

    Cerebral Cavernous Malformations was the name of my punk rock band in college.

  • Google Wakefield's discovery of the gut-brain connection in the 90s.

    He was destroyed by media and scientists around the world, yet they didn't even seem to notice he wasn't even studying vaccines at all.

    Take some time to listen to a very reasonable explanation about his discovery. If you can be patient hearing about anti-vaccine slant, you will hear a fascinating story of discovery about the gut-brain connection.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SeMXlh-f7p8 [youtube.com]

    He's a calm and reasonable man that explains simply a

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The old saying is slightly true. You are what you it. It is the food you eat that determines your gut bacteria, which in turn can influence your body. To what extent you may ask? More research is being done, but it hints at way more than what was previously thought.

  • it will take approximately 25 seconds before some idiot antivaxxer holds this study up as somehow vindicating Andrew Wakefield...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Wakefield wasn't studying vaccines, and at the time wasn't even against vaccines when he was attacked in the media.

      He's a gut specialist, and seems to know his field of study, what do you know about gut/brain connections?

      If the truth is that Wakefield is vindicated because of this, then you are now the denier.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Too late. It happened before you posted.

  • There was an interesting segment regarding shit replacement therapy in a documentary "Life on Us". One of the patients had reported an inexplicable sudden loss of a long term depression after the treatment.

    More research in this area would be really great, since a correctly balanced microbiome seems to have positive impacts on a pretty wide range of maladies from obesity to cognitive defects. I've recently been wondering whether or not the only difference between the skinny guy and the fat guy, both eating m

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