Journal article

Gut permeability and microbiota in parkinson’s disease: Role of depression, tryptophan catabolites, oxidative and nitrosative stress and melatonergic pathways

G Anderson, M Seo, M Berk, AF Carvalho, M Maes

Current Pharmaceutical Design | BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD | Published : 2016

Abstract

Background: Increased gut permeability (leaky gut) and alterations in gut microbiota are now widely accepted as relevant to the etiology, course and treatment of many neuropsychiatric disorders, including Parkinson disease (PD). Although a wide array of data on the biological underpinnings of PD has not yet been linked to such gut-associated changes, increased gut permeability and dysregulated microbiota alter many pathways germane to PD. Methods: In this article we review and integrate these wider biological changes in PD, including increased oxidative and nitrosative stress, immune-inflammatory processes, tryptophan catabolites and alterations in serotoninergic and melatoninergic pathways...

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University of Melbourne Researchers