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Microbiota Brain Axis

A Neuroscience Primer

  • 1st Edition - February 22, 2024
  • Latest edition
  • Authors: Jane Foster, Gerard Clarke
  • Language: English

Microbiota Brain Axis: A Neuroscience Primer provides neuroscience researchers with a comprehensive guide on how to conduct effective microbiota-brain research, understand the ap… Read more

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Description

Microbiota Brain Axis: A Neuroscience Primer provides neuroscience researchers with a comprehensive guide on how to conduct effective microbiota-brain research, understand the appropriate methodologies, and collect and analyze microbiota data. The book begins with an introduction to the importance of the microbiota-brain communication in development and how microbiota impact neurodevelopmental disorders, mental health and neurodegeneration. In addition, the book discusses advances in microbiota analysis tools and techniques for neuroscience related research.

Key features

  • Reviews the many approaches to manipulating the microbiota in animal studies - including the use of germ-free animals, antibiotics and diet - and covers the strengths and limitations of each
  • Outlines available microbiota research tools, such as 16S sequencing and shot-gun metagenomics
  • Provides a comprehensive guide to analyzing microbiota-related data and the many choices for bioinformatics

Readership

Advanced students, basic researchers, and clinical researchers in behavioral neuroscience, neuroimmunology, biological psychiatry, developmental neuroscience, and related fields; researchers in physiology, nutrition, immunology, and gastroenterology

Table of contents

1. The gut-brain axis

2. What is a healthy microbiome?

3. Gene-environment factors influence microbiota composition, diversity, and function

4. Microbiota to brain communication

5. Microbiota influence behaviour – work in animal models

6. Microbiota influence brain systems – work in animal models

7. Microbiota in neurodevelopmental disorders

8. Microbiota in psychiatry

9. Microbiota-brain interactions in aging and neurodegeneration

10. Pharmacological treatments and the microbiome - Antibiotics and nonantibiotic drugs

11. Microbial-related treatments

12. Microbiota-related biomarkers for precision medicine and drug discovery

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: February 22, 2024
  • Language: English

About the authors

JF

Jane Foster

Dr. Jane Foster, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry, at the Center for Depression Research and Clinical Care at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. In the past 20 years, Dr. Foster has developed an internationally recognized translational research program that uses a ‘bench to bedside’ and back again approach to studying microbiota - brain and immune - brain systems. As one of the early proponents of the role of gut - brain axis in mental health, her lab produced important data demonstrating a role for the microbiome in brain development and behavior in animal studies and recently has extended this work to study the complex neurobiological underpinnings of microbiota - brain and neuroimmune systems in psychiatric illness in clinical populations. Her multidisciplinary expertise includes behavioral neuroscience, molecular biology, immunology, neuroimaging, microbiome, and bioinformatics in both preclinical and clinical research domains. Dr. Foster’s research program has developed high-quality analytical pipelines for biological data and novel analytical tools for integrating data across modalities.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor, Center for Depression Research and Clinical Care, Department of Psychiatry, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX

GC

Gerard Clarke

Prof. Gerard Clarke, Ph.D., is a Professor of Neurobehavioral Science in the Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Science and a Principal Investigator in APC Microbiome Ireland at University College Cork. His research program includes a focus on translational biomarkers of stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders, the impact of the gut microbiome on brain and behavior across the life span, and microbial regulation of tryptophan metabolism. Key achievements of his lab in the generation of knowledge around the microbiota - gut - brain axis include the demonstration that the gut microbiome regulates the hippocampal serotonergic system in a sex-dependent manner, findings that paved the way for numerous lines of inquiry on the effects of the gut microbiome on neurodevelopment, brain function, and behavior. He is regularly included in Clarivate Analytics Highly Cited Researchers list, placing him among the world’s top one percent of researchers by citation. His current approach is based on advancing frontier knowledge in microbiome research to yield potential new therapeutic targets for the effective treatment of the central nervous system and gastrointestinal disorders.
Affiliations and expertise
Lecturer, Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioural Science and Principal Investigator, APC Microbiome Ireland, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

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