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Article Abstract

Psychiatric disorders pose substantial global burdens on public health, yet therapeutic options remain limited. Recently, gut microbiota is in the spotlight of new research on psychiatric disorders, as emerging discoveries have highlighted the importance of gut microbiome in the regulation of central nervous system via mediating the gut-brain-axis bidirectional communication. While metagenomics studies have accumulated for psychiatric disorders, few systematic efforts were dedicated to integrating these high-throughput data across diverse phenotypes, interventions, geographical regions, and biological species. To present a panoramic view of global data and provide a comprehensive resource for investigating the gut microbiota dysbiosis in psychiatric disorders, we developed the PsycGM, a manually curated and well-annotated database that provides the literature-supported associations between gut microbiota and psychiatric disorders or intervention measures. In total, PsycGM incorporated 559 studies from 31 countries worldwide, encompassing research involving humans, rats, mice, and non-human primates. PsycGM documented 8907 curated associations between 1514 gut microbial taxa and 11 psychiatric disorders, as well as 4050 associations between 869 taxa and 232 microbiota-based and non-microbiota-based interventions. Moreover, PsycGM provided a user-friendly web interface with comprehensive information, enabling browsing, retrieving and downloading of all entries. In the application of PsycGM, we panoramically depicted the intestinal microecological imbalance in depression. Additionally, we identified 9 microbial taxa consistently altered in patients with depression, with the most common dysregulations observed for Parabacteroides, Alistipes, and Faecalibacterium; in animal models of depression, consistent changes were observed in 21 microbial taxa, most frequently reported as Helicobacter, Lactobacillus, Roseburia, and the ratio of Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes. PsycGM is a comprehensive resource for future investigations on the role of gut microbiota in mental and brain health, and for therapeutic target innovations based on modifications of gut microbiota. PsycGM is freely accessed at http://psycgmomics.info .

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-025-03000-5DOI Listing

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