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Correlation between Gut Microbiota and Six Facets of Neuroticism in Korean Adults

Title
Correlation between Gut Microbiota and Six Facets of Neuroticism in Korean Adults
Authors
Park, EunkyoYun, Kyung EunKim, Mi-HyunKim, JiminChang, YoosooRyu, SeunghoKim, Hyung-LaeKim, Han-NaJung, Sung-Chul
Ewha Authors
김형래정성철
SCOPUS Author ID
김형래scopusscopusscopus; 정성철scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF PERSONALIZED MEDICINE
ISSN
2075-4426JCR Link
Citation
JOURNAL OF PERSONALIZED MEDICINE vol. 11, no. 12
Keywords
microbiotaneuroticismgut-brain axis16s sequencinganxietydepressionvulnerability
Publisher
MDPI
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
A person high in neuroticism is more likely to experience anxiety, stress, worry, fear, anger, and depression. Previous studies have shown that the gut microbiota can influence personality and mental disorders, including stress, anxiety, and depression, through the gut-brain axis. Here, we investigated the correlations between the sub-facet of neuroticism and gut microbiota using the Revised NEO Personality Inventory and the 16S rRNA gene sequencing data 784 adults. We found that the high anxiety and vulnerability group showed significantly lower richness in microbial diversity than a group with low anxiety and vulnerability. In beta diversity, there was a significant difference between the low and high groups of anxiety, self-consciousness, impulsiveness, and vulnerability. In taxonomic compositions, Haemophilus belonging to Gammaproteobacteria was correlated with the Neuroticism domain as well as N1 anxiety and N6 vulnerability facets. The high N1 anxiety and N6 vulnerability group was correlated with a low abundance of Christensenellaceae belonging to Firmicutes Clostridia. High N4 self-consciousness was correlated with a low abundance of Alistipes and Sudoligranulum. N5 impulsiveness was correlated with a low abundance of Oscillospirales. Our findings will contribute to uncovering the potential link between the gut microbiota and neuroticism, and the elucidation of the correlations of the microbiome-gut-brain axis with behavioral changes and psychiatric cases in the general population.
DOI
10.3390/jpm11121246
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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