Dogs' bacteria could be your teen's best friend

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PHOTO: Helena Lopes on Unsplash
PHOTO: Helena Lopes on Unsplash

Pet dogs could potentially improve teenagers’ wellbeing not only through cuddles, but also by changing the bacteria living in their bodies. Japanese researchers assessed the behaviour and emotional state of over 300 teenagers, finding those with pet dogs tended to have fewer social and behavioural problems. In tests of the teens’ saliva, dog owners had more of some types of bacteria - and when saliva bacteria from 6 teenagers were fed to mice, those given bacteria from dog-owning teens tended to become more social. The researchers say that while mouse and human behaviour can't be directly compared, this suggests the bacteria teens get from their dogs might help improve their wellbeing.

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From: Cell Press

Family dogs boost adolescent mental health through the microbiome

It’s no surprise that dogs benefit people’s mental health. In a paper publishing in the Cell Press journal iScience on December 3, researchers point to a reason as to why: dogs prompt changes in the collection of microbes that live in and on our bodies, resulting in an increase in mental health.

“Raising dogs has beneficial effects, especially for adolescents, and these effects may be mediated through symbiosis with microorganisms,” says author Takefumi Kikusui of Azabu University in Japan.

In previous work, Kikusui’s team found that young people who grow up with a dog from a young age and continue to have dogs later in life score higher on measures of companionship and social support. Other studies showed dog owners also have differences in their gut microbiomes, including greater microbial diversity.

In this study, the researchers set out to explore whether some of the beneficial effects of dogs on adolescent mental health might be tied to these differences in the microbiome.

“Adolescent children who keep dogs exhibit higher mental well-being, and we also found that dog ownership alters the gut microbiota,” said Kikusui. “Since the gut microbiota influences behavior through the gut-brain axis, we conducted this experiment.”

The researchers found that a person’s dog-owning status at age 13 predicted their mental health and behavioral scores. Social problems were significantly lower in adolescents with a dog at home compared to those without a dog.

Next, they looked at microbiome samples collected from the mouth. After sequencing the microbes, the researchers found similar species diversity and richness between the two groups of teens. But the microbiome composition showed differences, suggesting that owning a dog shifted the abundances of specific oral bacteria. They hypothesized that some of those bacteria might correlate with the adolescents’ psychological scores.

To put this idea to the test, the researchers treated laboratory mice with microbiota from dog-owning teens to see whether and how it affected their social behavior. Mice with the dog-owning microbiome spent more time sniffing their cage mates. The animals also showed a more social approach toward a trapped cage-mate—a behavior test standardly used to test prosocial behavior in mice.

“The most interesting finding from this study is that bacteria promoting prosociality, or empathy, were discovered in the microbiomes of adolescent children who keep dogs,” Kikusui said. “The implication is that the benefits of dog ownership include providing a sense of security through interaction, but I believe it also holds value in its potential to alter the symbiotic microbial community.”

The researchers say that while more research is needed, the results suggest that a family dog can change the microbiome in ways that support mental health, empathy, and prosocial behavior. The benefits of living with dogs are likely the result of tens of thousands of years of human-canine coexistence, they say.

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Journal/
conference:
iScience
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Gunma University, Japan
Funder: This study was financially supported by JST-Mirai Program, Japan, grant no. JPMJMI21J3, JST RISTEX grant no. JPMJRS24K1 and JSPS-KAKENHI (23H05472 to T.K. and 21H03333 and 21H05173 to M.N.).
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