Social anxiety disorder-associated gut microbiota increases social fear
Nathaniel L. Ritz(University College Cork), John F. Cryan(University College Cork), María R. Aburto(University College Cork), Andrey N. Shkoporov(University College Cork), Valentine Turpin(University College Cork), Thomaz F. S. Bastiaanssen(University College Cork), Anna Ratsika(University College Cork), Camila Barrera-Bugueño(University College Cork), Cassandra E. Gheorghe(APC Microbiome Institute), Anna V. Golubeva(University College Cork), Gerard M. Moloney(University College Cork), Colin Hill(University College Cork), Caitlin S.M. Cowan(University of Missouri Health System), David A. Slattery(University of Regensburg), Marta Brocka(University College Cork), Lorena Morales(University College Cork), Christopher Turkington(University College Cork), David Campos(University College Cork), Mary Butler(University College Cork), Timothy G. Dinan(University College Cork), Gerard Clarke(University College Cork), Virat Sharma(University College Cork), Lorraine A. Draper(University College Cork)
Cited by 65
Related Papers
The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis
|Physiological Reviews|2019|4.8k
Serotonin, tryptophan metabolism and the brain-gut-microbiome axis
|Behavioural Brain Research|2014|2k
The microbiome-gut-brain axis during early life regulates the hippocampal serotonergic system in a sex-dependent manner
|Molecular Psychiatry|2012|1.9k
The interaction between bacteria and bile
|FEMS Microbiology Reviews|2004|1.8k
Transferring the blues: Depression-associated gut microbiota induces neurobehavioural changes in the rat
|Journal of Psychiatric Research|2016|1.7k