The Causal Relationships Between Gut Microbiota, Brain Volume, and Intelligence: A Two-Step Mendelian Randomization Analysis (Sep 2024) Causation 

Michael Harrop

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https://www.biologicalpsychiatryjournal.com/article/S0006-3223(24)01132-6/abstract

Abstract​

Background​

Growing evidence indicates that dynamic changes in gut microbiome can affect intelligence; however, whether these relationships are causal remains elusive. We aimed to disentangle the poorly understood causal relationship between gut microbiota and intelligence.

Methods​

We performed a 2-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis using genetic variants from the largest available genome-wide association studies of gut microbiota (N = 18,340) and intelligence (N = 269,867). The inverse-variance weighted method was used to conduct the MR analyses complemented by a range of sensitivity analyses to validate the robustness of the results. Considering the close relationship between brain volume and intelligence, we applied 2-step MR to evaluate whether the identified effect was mediated by regulating brain volume (N = 47,316).

Results​

We found a risk effect of the genus Oxalobacter on intelligence (odds ratio = 0.968 change in intelligence per standard deviation increase in taxa; 95% CI, 0.952–0.985; p = 1.88 × 10−4) and a protective effect of the genus Fusicatenibacter on intelligence (odds ratio = 1.053; 95% CI, 1.024–1.082; p = 3.03 × 10−4). The 2-step MR analysis further showed that the effect of genus Fusicatenibacter on intelligence was partially mediated by regulating brain volume, with a mediated proportion of 33.6% (95% CI, 6.8%–60.4%; p = .014).

Conclusions​

Our results provide causal evidence indicating the role of the microbiome in intelligence. Our findings may help reshape our understanding of the microbiota-gut-brain axis and development of novel intervention approaches for preventing cognitive impairment.

The fact that the analysis is on the genus level seems to be the biggest caveat.
 
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I wonder what microorganisms might influence visuospatial memory?

I have poor visuospatial memory which makes it hard for me to memorize streets and Chinese characters. My background - a premie born 2 months too soon. I suffered 2 bouts of pneumonia in an ICU due to de facto medical negligence (sick coughing nurses handling me without a mask) and had to undergo a surgery on a detached retina. I wonder if prematurity and early infections impacted my brain development?
 
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