Abstract
BackgroundThe function of gut microbiota as its role in normal physiology and involvement in brain function has gained a great deal of attention. The potential long-lasting effects of postweaning sodium butyrate (SB) exposure on social behaviors are still unknown; however it acts as one of the metabolites of gut microbiota. MethodsMale mice (24-day old) were exposed to SB through drinking water for 21 continuous days. A series of behavioral tests, mainly including bedding preference test (BP), sexual preference test (SP), social interaction test (SI), tube dominance test (SDT), forced swimming test (FST), open field test (OFT), novel object recognition task (NOR) were conducted at different time after 21-d SB exposure. Serum Trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) levels were investigated to gain insight into a potential mechanism. ResultsBehavioral results indicated that postweaning SB exposure significantly decreased the social dominance status of low-ranked mice and decreased the sexual preference without affecting social interaction. SB exposure also exerted transient anxiolytic-like effects, while having induced a long-lasting depression-like effect without effects on memory formation. Postweaning SB exposure increased serum TMAO levels in mice, especially in lower-ranked mice, but decreased in higher-ranked mice. LimitationsLack of understanding of the underlying mechanism. ConclusionsThese findings provide direct evidence, for the first time, that postweaning SB exposure produces long-term effects on social behaviors in adult mice, mainly referring to sexual orientation, social dominance, and depression-like behaviors, which may be related to the serum TMAO levels, highlighting the long-lasting potential effects of gut-brain interaction on social behaviors.
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