Stanford Scientists Reverse Age-Related Memory Loss by Targeting the Gut
7 hours ago
- #gut-brain axis
- #microbiome
- #cognitive aging
- Aging alters gut bacteria in mice, which weakens vagus nerve signaling between the intestines and brain, leading to memory decline.
- Restoring gut-brain communication via vagus nerve stimulation improved memory in older mice to levels seen in young mice.
- The gut microbiome changes with age, with increased Parabacteroides goldsteinii linked to inflammation and reduced hippocampal activity.
- Shared housing experiments showed young mice exposed to old microbiomes performed worse on memory tests, while antibiotics reversed cognitive decline in these mice.
- Researchers propose a pathway: gut aging → microbial/metabolic changes → immune inflammation → impaired vagus nerve signaling → memory decline.
- The study suggests peripheral interventions targeting the gut could preserve cognitive function, with potential clinical applications for age-related cognitive decline.