2019 Food Innovation and Engineering (FOODIE) Asia Conference
Keynote Talk: The Intersection of Diet, Brain, Gut Microbiome and Behaviour - Intervening to Improve Cognition
Author
More recently we have investigated whether the bacteriostatic antibiotic, minocycline, which is reported to exert anti-inflammatory effects, can modulate spatial memory. Again, cafeteria diet produced persistent deficits in spatial memory (novel place recognition) that were prevented by minocycline cotreatment. Of interest, chow fed rats treated with minocycline performed worse than those treated with vehicle. Faecal microbiota alpha diversity was reduced by both cafeteria diet and minocycline treatment, but these reductions were not associated with performance on the novel place task. However, abundances of specific OTUs within Bacteroides and Lactobacillus were associated with place task performance. Together, studies such as these suggest the gut microbiota could play a causal role in regulating behaviour. Current experiments are exploring the impact of fecal transfer on memory performance in rats consuming the obesogenic diet.