A randomized, triple-blind, placebo-controlled study on the effect of colon-delivered short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) on neural responses to stress and neuroepigenetics.
The goal of this interventional study is to study the underlying mechanism of the attenuating effect of colon-delivered SCFAs on the cortisol response to stress. Pre-clinical studies suggest that the histone-deacetylase (HDAC)-inhibiting properties of SCFAs are the main mechanism underlying SCFA-induced changes in stress, cognition and behavior. Primary objective: to test the effect of colon-delivered SCFA intervention versus placebo on HDAC expression in the brain and neural responses to stress Secondary objective: to determine the effects of colon-delivered SCFA administration versus placebo on inflammatory and autonomic responses to stress and to determine the mediating and/or moderating factors that potentially underlie SCFA-induced changes to stress responses (HDAC expression in stress-responsive regions, serum SCFA levels) To this end, 32 participants will be asked to undergo a pre- and post-intervention visit, separated by one week intervention with either colon-delivered SCFAs or placebo (16 per group). During the study visits, participants undergo simultaneous PET-MR imaging with \[11C\]Martinostat. They undergo the Montreal Imaging Stress Test (MIST) and the Maastricht Acute Stress Test (MAST) at each visit.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
32
Colon-delivery capsules of Short-Chain Fatty Acids will be administered in a ratio of 60:20:20, thus 150 mmol of acetate, 50 mmol of propionate and 50 mmol of butyrate equivalent to 20g of fibers, once daily, one week
Microcrystalline Cellulose will be used as placebo, one daily, one week
UZ/KU Leuven
Leuven, Belgium
HDAC expression
Brain HDAC expression will be quantified using the PET radiotracer \[11C\]Martinostat before and after the intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Brain response to stress
Brain response (brain oxygenation level-dependent signals) to a fMRI-adapted stress task will be measured before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Brain metabolite concentration
Relative quantification of brain metabolites (mmol/L) using 1H-Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Serum short-chain fatty acid levels
Quantification of serum SCFA (μM) before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Salivary cortisol response to stress
Biological stress sensitivity is measured by quantifying cortisol levels (ng/ml) from multiple saliva samples taken before, during, and after a stress task performed during the pre-intervention and post-intervention visit
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Cytokine levels
Quantification of inflammatory cytokines (pg/ml) before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
C-reactive protein levels
Quantification of hs-C-reactive protein levels (ng/ml) before and after intervention
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Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Heart rate variability
Assessing heart rate variability (ms) with ECG before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Blood pressure
Assessing blood pressure (systolic/diastolic mmHg) with a blood pressure monitor before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Heartbeat
Assessing heartbeat (bpm) with a blood pressure monitor before and after intervention
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years
Self-reported stress
Psychological stress sensitivity is measured through stress reports of the participants using the visual analogue scale (VAS). VAS scorings are taken before, during, and after a stress task performed during the pre-intervention and post-intervention visit.
Time frame: Throughout study completion, on average 2 years