166. Increased Intestinal Permeability & Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) Axis Dysfunction | Cortisol & More
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In this episode, we detail the bidirectional relationship between the HPA axis and the intestinal barrier, illustrating how HPA axis dysfunction and cortisol dysregulation can impact intestinal permeability. We further discuss how intestinal dysbiosis can contribute to HPA axis overstimulation. Lastly, we detail some of the roles of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and secretory IgA (sIgA) in this bidirectional relationship.
Topics:
1. Overview of the HPA Axis and Gut Bidirectional Relationship
- Chronic HPA activation, intestinal permeability, mucosalimmunity, and microbiome composition.
2. Components and Function of the HPA Axis
- Hypothalamus, pituitary gland, and adrenal glands.
- Stress signals from the amygdala and prefrontal cortex, CRH release from the hypothalamus.
- CRH stimulates ACTH release from the pituitary.
- Cortisol production and release.
3. Structure of the Intestinal Epithelial Barrier
- The gut barrier consists of the intestinal lumen, microbiome, mucus layer, epithelial cells, and lamina propria.
- Specialized epithelial cells: goblet cells, enterocytes, enteroendocrine cells, and more.
- The lamina propria contains immune cells, blood vessels, and lymphatics, supported by a smooth muscle layer.
4. Intestinal Permeability and Tight Junction Regulation
- Transport across the intestinal epithelium: transcellular and paracellular pathways.
- Nutrient absorption and selective permeability.
- Tight junction proteins, such as occludin and claudins.
5. Cortisol’s Impact on Gut Barrier Integrity
- Cortisol can cross the intestinal microvascular endothelium and enter the lamina propria.
- Chronic cortisol exposure and intestinal barrier function.
- Increased permeability allows luminal antigens and bacterial endotoxins (e.g., LPS) to infiltrate the lamina propria.
6. Secretory IgA (sIgA) and Gut Immune Function
- Chronic cortisol exposure can reduce sIgA levels, weakening mucosal immunity.
- sIgA neutralizes pathogens, prevents microbial adhesion, and more.
- Lower sIgA levels increase susceptibility to dysbiosis and infections.
7. CRH and Its Role in Intestinal Permeability
- CRH is produced in the hypothalamus and also peripherally.
- CRH can stimulate mast cells, triggering histamine and inflammatory mediator release.
- Mast cell activation can increase gut permeability.
8. Microbiome’s Influence on HPA Axis Regulation
- Dysbiosis can disrupt HPA axis function.
- IBS and sustained HPA activation.
- Dysbiosis reduces SCFA production.
- SCFAs, particularly butyrate, support colonocyte health, tight junction integrity, and anti-inflammatory pathways.
- Inflammation and HPA axis dysfunction.
9. Root Cause Approach & Closing
- Chronic cortisol exposure, CRH signaling, and gut barrier dysfunction.
- The microbiome influences stress response and HPA axis activity.
- Roles of SCFAs, sIgA, and tight junction proteins.
- Addressing gut dysbiosis and GI-derived inflammation can support HPA axis regulation.
- Root cause approach.
Thank you to our episode sponsors:
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