This shows a woman surrounded by light.
In clinical practice, photobiomodulation applies light from lasers or other low-intensity sources to stimulate the activity of an organ with an altered physiology. Credit: Neuroscience News

Activating Brain-Gut Connection with Light Reduces Depression

Summary: A new study reveals how photobiomodulation, a non-invasive light therapy, effectively treats cognitive impairments caused by chronic stress by targeting the brain-gut axis. This innovative approach was shown to significantly improve conditions in lab animal models.

The study highlights the potential of using photobiomodulation to treat neurological disorders by simultaneously stimulating the brain and gut, thus opening new avenues for treating depression and other psychiatric conditions. This therapy is noted for its safety, lack of severe side effects, and potential applicability in treatment-resistant depression.

Key Facts:

  1. Photobiomodulation stimulates the brain and gut simultaneously, enhancing the brain-gut axis, which is crucial for mental health.
  2. This therapy has been adapted for safe use in humans without overheating tissues and is well tolerated with minimal side effects compared to traditional pharmacological treatments.
  3. The study suggests a potential new treatment pathway for psychiatric disorders that considers the integral roles of various organs and tissues, not just the brain.

Source: University of Barcelona

Some neurological disorders can be improved through photobiomodulation, a non-invasive technique based on the application of low-intensity light to stimulate altered functions in specific regions of the body.

Now, a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders reveals how photobiomodulation applied to the brain-gut axis is effective in recovering some cognitive alterations and sequelae caused by chronic stress.

The study opens up new perspectives for applying the technique in future therapies for the treatment of neurological diseases in patients.

The article, based on the study of laboratory animal models, is led by Professor Albert Giralt, from the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences and the Institute of Neurosciences (UBneuro) of the University of Barcelona. Teams from the UB’s Centre for the Production and Validation of Advanced Therapies (CREATIO) and the University of Girona, as well as from the University of Montpellier and the company REGEnLIFE (France) are also participating.

Low-intensity light for activating the gut-brain axis

In clinical practice, photobiomodulation applies light from lasers or other low-intensity sources to stimulate the activity of an organ with an altered physiology. Now, the new study applies, for the first time in the field of depression, the use of combined photobiomodulation to stimulate different organs, specifically the brain and the gut.

“This is one of the most innovative scientific contributions of the study: to co-stimulate in a coordinated way the brain and the gut at the same time, i.e. the gut-brain axis. Today, the area of research into the gut-brain axis is generating great scientific interest and is a very promising field for the possible treatment of diseases of the nervous system”, says Professor Albert Giralt, member of the August Pi i Sunyer Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBAPS) and the Network Centre for Biomedical Research on Neurodegenerative Diseases (CIBERNED).

“The new therapeutic approach focuses on this now rediscovered scenario of intervention and manipulation of the gut-brain axis to address neurological and psychiatric disorders”, says Giralt.

“Photobiomodulation is a non-invasive technology that is very well tolerated by patients and lacks the side effects of pharmacological treatments. In addition, this advance could also be useful in the treatment of pathologies without clear or incomplete medical coverage, such as the treatment-resistant subtype of depression”, adds the expert.

The devices for the application of photobiomodulation, developed by the company REGEnLIFE, have been adapted from previous studies related to Alzheimer’s patients. They combine multiple stimulation sources (laser, LED, etc.) associated with a magnetic ring to stabilise the emission of light in a pulsed — and not continuous — manner to avoid overheating the tissues, and are adapted for clinical application in patients.

Psychiatric disorders: beyond the brain

Another scientific objective of the study is to prove that psychiatric disorders are not only centred in the brain, “but that other tissues and organs also play a decisive role in their pathophysiology. If new therapies take all these factors into account, it is very likely that we will be able to obtain very satisfactory results in the future”, says the researcher.

But do both photobiomodulation and photobiomodulation act on the cervical-intestinal axis? To date, there have only been descriptive studies of the modifications induced by photobiomodulation.

Now, the study delves into the molecular mechanisms and reveals how photobiomodulation is able to reverse the cognitive effects of chronic stress by restoring the sirta1 pathway, “related to senescence and neuronal death, the modulation of negative pyramiding and normalisation of diversity in the intestinal microbiota”, notes researcher Anna Sancho-Balcells (UB-UBneuro-CIBERNED), first author of the article.

“From other studies — she continues — it was known that the SIRT1 pathway is altered in preclinical models of stress and depression. However, the mechanisms by which photobiomodulation exerts its beneficial effects remained a mystery.

“In our study, we found that the SIRT1 pathway is the most altered physiological pathway in certain brain regions under chronic stress, and photobiomodulation has the capacity to restore it”.

In the digestive system, photobiomodulation would activate changes in the intestinal microbiota, effects that are superior in the case of dual brain-gut stimulation compared to treatment of the gut alone.

As Professor Xavier Xifró, from the TargetsLab research group at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Girona, explains, “the associated cellular mechanisms seem to be linked to the improvement of neuroinflammatory processes.

Thus, the changes observed in the microbiota are strongly associated with some changes in neuroinflammation (for example, microgliosis and astrogliosis, which occur through the inflammation of specific cells of the nervous system)”.

Combined photobiomodulation in patients with depression

Photobiomodulation could become a potential adjunctive treatment to be administered in coordination with pharmacological therapy in cases of major depressive disorders. In future research, the team would like to promote the design of clinical trials to test the efficacy of combined photobiomodulation in patients with depression.

“Photobiomodulation is likely to be particularly suitable for specific forms of depression, such as treatment-resistant depression.

“We also want to explore the relationship with neuroinflammatory processes: this is one of the best-rescued parameters after photobiomodulation and treatment-resistant depression is strongly associated with neuroinflammation”, concludes the research team.

About this depression and anxiety research news

Author: Rosa Martínez
Source: University of Barcelona
Contact: Rosa Martínez – University of Barcelona
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
Brain–gut photobiomodulation restores cognitive alterations in chronically stressed mice through the regulation of Sirt1 and neuroinflammation” by Albert Giralt et al. Journal of Affective Disorders


Abstract

Brain–gut photobiomodulation restores cognitive alterations in chronically stressed mice through the regulation of Sirt1 and neuroinflammation

Background

Chronic stress is an important risk factor for the development of major depressive disorder (MDD). Recent studies have shown microbiome dysbiosis as one of the pathogenic mechanisms associated with MDD. Thus, it is important to find novel non-pharmacological therapeutic strategies that can modulate gut microbiota and brain activity. One such strategy is photobiomodulation (PBM), which involves the non-invasive use of light.

Objective/hypothesis

Brain-gut PBM could have a synergistic beneficial effect on the alterations induced by chronic stress.

Methods

We employed the chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) protocol to induce a depressive-like state in mice. Subsequently, we administered brain-gut PBM for 6 min per day over a period of 3 weeks. Following PBM treatment, we examined behavioral, structural, molecular, and cellular alterations induced by CUMS.

Results

We observed that the CUMS protocol induces profound behavioral alterations and an increase of sirtuin1 (Sirt1) levels in the hippocampus. We then combined the stress protocol with PBM and found that tissue-combined PBM was able to rescue cognitive alterations induced by CUMS. This rescue was accompanied by a restoration of hippocampal Sirt1 levels, prevention of spine density loss in the CA1 of the hippocampus, and the modulation of the gut microbiome. PBM was also effective in reducing neuroinflammation and modulating the morphology of Iba1-positive microglia.

Limitations

The molecular mechanisms behind the beneficial effects of tissue-combined PBM are not fully understood.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that non-invasive photobiomodulation of both the brain and the gut microbiome could be beneficial in the context of stress-induced MDD.

Join our Newsletter
I agree to have my personal information transferred to AWeber for Neuroscience Newsletter ( more information )
Sign up to receive our recent neuroscience headlines and summaries sent to your email once a day, totally free.
We hate spam and only use your email to contact you about newsletters. You can cancel your subscription any time.