At ODC25, science journalist Kathleen McAuliffe delivered a compelling talk titled “Mind-Altering Microbes: Harnessing Their Power to Boost Mental Health,” exploring how the gut microbiome may profoundly shape the way we think, feel, and behave.
She began with deceptively simple questions: Would you go bungee jumping? Eat an entire pie in one sitting? Avoid social gatherings? These everyday choices, she suggested, may be influenced in part by the trillions of microbes residing in our gut. Far from being passive passengers, these microorganisms produce neurotransmitters, hormones, and other psychoactive compounds that communicate directly with the brain.
Drawing on striking animal studies, she described “germ-free” mice raised without a microbiome. Compared to normal mice, they show reduced fear, impaired learning, and unusual social behaviors. Remarkably, introducing the appropriate microbes can normalize these behaviors. Even more provocative, transferring gut bacteria from a depressed human into mice can induce depression-like symptoms – highlighting inflammation as a critical link between gut health and mood.
Dr. McAuliffe also unpacked the gut-brain axis, emphasizing the enteric nervous system – often called the “second brain”- and the vagus nerve, which carries the majority of its signals from gut to brain.
The clinical implications are far-reaching. Some antidepressants may work partly by reshaping the microbiome. Vagus nerve stimulation is already approved for treatment-resistant depression and epilepsy. GLP-1 drugs such as Wegovy may intersect with microbial signaling pathways that regulate appetite and reward. Perhaps most strikingly, emerging research suggests that Parkinson’s disease may, in some cases, originate in the gut before spreading to the brain.
The overarching message was clear: understanding and improving mental health may require us to look not only at the brain – but at the microbial world within.
Read more:
Organoids and Probiotics: Where Ancient Wellness Meets Future Science


