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    Home»Health»Bad Oral Bacteria May Travel to the Brain and Trigger Parkinson’s Disease
    Health

    Bad Oral Bacteria May Travel to the Brain and Trigger Parkinson’s Disease

    By Pohang University of Science & Technology (POSTECH)December 27, 20257 Comments4 Mins Read
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    Woman Degenerative Brain Disease
    A new study suggests that microbes originating outside the brain may influence the earliest stages of neurodegenerative disease. By uncovering a biological pathway linking microbial activity to neuronal damage, the research challenges traditional views of how Parkinson’s disease develops. Credit: Shutterstock

    Oral bacteria that migrate to the gut can generate metabolites that reach the brain and accelerate Parkinson’s disease.

    Here is one more reason to brush your teeth carefully every day. Researchers in Korea have found strong evidence that bacteria from the mouth can take hold in the gut, influence neurons in the brain, and may help set off Parkinson’s disease.

    Parkinson’s disease is a widespread neurological condition marked by tremors, muscle stiffness, and slowed movement. It affects roughly 1 to 2 percent of people over the age of 65, making it one of the most common brain disorders associated with aging.

    Earlier research had shown that the gut microbiome of people with Parkinson’s differs from that of healthy individuals, but which microbes were involved and how they influenced the disease was not well understood.

    A specific bacterium and metabolite stand out

    New findings help clarify that connection. Researchers discovered that people with Parkinson’s had elevated levels of Streptococcus mutans, a bacterium typically associated with tooth decay, within their gut microbiomes. Once established in the gut, this bacterium produces an enzyme called urocanate reductase (UrdA) and a metabolic byproduct known as imidazole propionate (ImP).

    Both substances were found at higher concentrations in the gut and bloodstream of patients. The evidence suggests that ImP can circulate through the body, reach the brain, and contribute to the loss of dopamine-producing neurons.

    The research behind these discoveries was conducted by a collaborative team led by Professor Ara Koh and doctoral candidate Hyunji Park from POSTECH’s Department of Life Sciences. They worked alongside Professor Yunjong Lee and doctoral candidate Jiwon Cheon from Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, as well as Professor Han-Joon Kim from Seoul National University College of Medicine.

    Together, the team identified how chemical byproducts released by oral bacteria after colonizing the gut could play a role in triggering Parkinson’s disease. Their findings were recently published in Nature Communications.

    Diagram of Oral Bacteria Driven Parkinson’s Pathway
    Diagram of Metabolite Accumulation in the Brain and Parkinson’s disease Induction Following Oral Bacteria Colonization in the Gut. Credit: POSTECH

    Using mouse models, the researchers introduced S. mutans into the gut or engineered E. coli to express UrdA. As a result, the mice showed elevated ImP levels in blood and brain tissue, along with the hallmark features of Parkinson’s symptoms: loss of dopaminergic neurons, heightened neuroinflammation, impaired motor function, and increased aggregation of alpha-synuclein, a protein central to disease progression.

    A signaling pathway links microbes to neurons

    Further experiments demonstrated that these effects depend on the activation of the signaling protein complex mTORC1. Treating mice with an mTORC1 inhibitor significantly reduced neuroinflammation, neuronal loss, and alpha-synuclein aggregation, and motor dysfunction. This suggests that targeting the oral–gut microbiome and its metabolites may offer new therapeutic strategies for Parkinson’s disease.

    “Our study provides a mechanistic understanding of how oral microbes in the gut can influence the brain and contribute to the development of Parkinson’s disease,” said Professor Ara Koh. “It highlights the potential of targeting the gut microbiota as a therapeutic strategy, offering a new direction for Parkinson’s treatment.”

    Reference: “Gut microbial production of imidazole propionate drives Parkinson’s pathologies” by Hyunji Park, Jiwon Cheon, Hyojung Kim, Jihye kim, Jihyun Kim, Jeong-Yong Shin, Hyojin Kim, Gaeun Ryu, In Young Chung, Ji Hun Kim, Doeun Kim, Zhidong Zhang, Hao Wu, Katharina R. Beck, Fredrik Bäckhed, Han-Joon Kim, Yunjong Lee and Ara Koh, 5 September 2025, Nature Communications.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-63473-4

    The research was supported by the Samsung Research Funding & Incubation Center of Samsung Electronics, the Mid-Career Researcher Program of the Ministry of Science and ICT, the Microbiome Core Research Support Center, and the Biomedical Technology Development Program.

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    Brain Microbiome Neuroscience Parkinson's Disease Pohang University of Science & Technology Popular
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    7 Comments

    1. Peter on December 27, 2025 6:41 am

      Excellent paper. Have passed this to a 47yr old friend suffering this terrible affliction.

      Reply
    2. Sean Irwin on December 28, 2025 11:26 am

      Treatment options please???? FFS

      Reply
      • James Ng on December 28, 2025 12:39 pm

        Brush your brain with Crest bid.

        Reply
        • Kieron on December 28, 2025 10:33 pm

          What’s Crest bid.

          Reply
    3. Ann Brownell on December 28, 2025 2:18 pm

      Patients with Amyloid Angiopothy (Spelling) I am told have some similarities? Why not have a look at this illnes as well.
      Also the world’s population must have had shocking dental health particularly with no fluoride. Dental cavities would have been well established prior to 25 years so why did populations survive with low Parkinson’s rates. I think Parkinson disease is caused by a chemical use in agriculture. My relative who farmed in Tasmania said most of the farmers there died of Parkinson’s from chemicals used on their farms. Keen gardeners who spray their gardens get it 100% . It’s the numbers that tell the story. The chemical companies deny this. Dildrin??

      Reply
      • Judy Anderson on December 30, 2025 5:40 am

        Who says the world had shocking dental health before fluoride? Dental plaque is caused by eating food with high sugar content. The food pyramid has us eating carbs 5-6 times a day for the last 45 years – it’s the sugars carbohydrates and sweetened beverages including fruit juice that does the damage. Fluoride neutralises that to some degree has some serious downsides.

        Reply
    4. Suman Saurabh on December 30, 2025 8:26 am

      Thats really interesting to know about! Thanks for this study..

      Reply
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