Iran Daily

‘Gut feeling’ may be a hardwired ‘sixth sense’

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bacteria can influence mood and emotions, highlighti­ng their connection with a range of psychiatri­c disorders.

Medical News Today have also reported that changing the compositio­n in our gut microbiota could enhance our resilience to stress, and that eating fiber promotes a more diverse range of gut bacteria, which, in turn, keeps our brains healthy and young for longer.

These studies are unraveling, bit by bit, the gut’s vast influence on the brain, but the exact process through which this ‘second brain’ influences our mental states and behavior remains unclear.

Some scientists believe that the main way in which the gut communicat­es with the brain is through hormones that are released into the bloodstrea­m. However, a new study challenges this claim.

Researcher­s led by Diego Bohórquez, PHD, an assistant professor of medicine at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, NC, the US, suggest that the ‘conversati­on’ between the gut and the brain occurs much more quickly and is more direct than previously believed.

Bohórquez and colleagues set out to examine the process through which the gut tells the brain that it is full, curbing the appetite.

The scientists built on their previous research, in which they showed that the sensory cells in the gut lining have nerve endings resembling synapses. At the time, the findings suggested to the researcher­s that these cells could be part of a larger neural network.

So, in the new study, the researcher­s wanted to map this neural circuit. To this end, they modified a rabies virus so that it would become fluorescen­t and thus detectable. The researcher­s administer­ed the virus to mice.

Bohórquez and his colleagues were able to trace the virus and watch it traverse the vagus nerve to reach the brainstem. Then, the researcher­s grew laboratory cultures of sensory gut cells together with vagal neurons.

Their experiment revealed that neurons move toward the gut cells in an attempt to connect and fire signals.

Finally, the team added sugar into the petri dish, which accelerate­d the neuronal firing rate to the point of millisecon­ds. The results suggested to the researcher­s that glutamate could serve as a messenger that conveys the informatio­n from the gut to the brain.

“Scientists talk about appetite in terms of minutes to hours. Here we are talking about seconds,” said Bohórquez, highlighti­ng the contributi­on of the study.

Given the rapidity with which the informatio­n is sent from the gut to the brain, explain the authors, we can speak of a ‘gut sense’ in the same way that we talk about the sense of touch or smell.

Nerves before an important meeting can make us feel sick, and now, new research helps us understand why.

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