The gut, its microbiome, and the brain: connections and communications.


Journal article


M. Gershon, K. Margolis
Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Gershon, M., & Margolis, K. (2021). The gut, its microbiome, and the brain: connections and communications. Journal of Clinical Investigation.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Gershon, M., and K. Margolis. “The Gut, Its Microbiome, and the Brain: Connections and Communications.” Journal of Clinical Investigation (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Gershon, M., and K. Margolis. “The Gut, Its Microbiome, and the Brain: Connections and Communications.” Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{m2021a,
  title = {The gut, its microbiome, and the brain: connections and communications.},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Journal of Clinical Investigation},
  author = {Gershon, M. and Margolis, K.}
}

Abstract

Modern research on gastrointestinal behavior has revealed it to be a highly complex bidirectional process in which the gut sends signals to the brain, via spinal and vagal visceral afferent pathways, and receives sympathetic and parasympathetic inputs. Concomitantly, the enteric nervous system within the bowel, which contains intrinsic primary afferent neurons, interneurons, and motor neurons, also senses the enteric environment and controls the detailed patterns of intestinal motility and secretion. The vast microbiome that is resident within the enteric lumen is yet another contributor, not only to gut behavior, but to the bidirectional signaling process, so that the existence of a microbiota-gut-brain "connectome" has become apparent. The interaction between the microbiota, the bowel, and the brain now appears to be neither a top-down nor a bottom-up process. Instead, it is an ongoing, tripartite conversation, the outline of which is beginning to emerge and is the subject of this Review. We emphasize aspects of the exponentially increasing knowledge of the microbiota-gut-brain "connectome" and focus attention on the roles that serotonin, Toll-like receptors, and macrophages play in signaling as exemplars of potentially generalizable mechanisms.


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