Polygonum sibiricum polysaccharides (PSP) are one of the main active components of Polygonatum sibiricum, which is a traditional Chinese medicine with food and drug homologies. Recent studies have revealed the antidepressant‐like effects of PSP. However, the precise mechanisms have not been clarified. Therefore, the present study was conducted to explore that whether PSP could exert the antidepressant‐like effects via microbiota‐gut‐brain (MGB) axis in chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS)‐induced depressive mice by transplantation of fecal microbiota (FMT) from PSP administration mice. FMT markedly reversed the depressive‐like behaviors of CUMS‐induced mice in the open field, the sucrose preference, the tail suspension, the forced swimming, and the novelty‐suppressed feeding tests. FMT significantly increased the levels of 5‐hydroxytryptamine and norepinephrine, decreased the levels of the pro‐inflammatory cytokines in the hippocampus and reduced the levels of corticosterone, an adrenocorticotropic‐hormone, in the serum of CUMS‐induced mice. In addition, administration of PSP and FMT significantly increased the expressions of ZO‐1 and occludin in the colon and decreased the levels of lipopolysaccharide and interferon‐γ in the serum of CUMS‐induced mice. Moreover, administration of PSP and FMT regulated the signaling pathways of PI3K/AKT/TLR4/NF‐κB and ERK/CREB/BDNF. Taken together, these findings indicated that PSP exerted antidepressant‐like effects via the MGB axis.
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