| Literature DB >> 25072037 |
Eleonora Napoli1, Nadia Dueñas1, Cecilia Giulivi2.
Abstract
The ketogenic diet (KGD) has been recognized as an effective treatment for individuals with glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) and pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) deficiencies as well as with epilepsy. More recently, its use has been advocated in a number of neurological disorders prompting a newfound interest in its possible therapeutic use in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). One study and one case report indicated that children with ASD treated with a KGD showed decreased seizure frequencies and exhibited behavioral improvements (i.e., improved learning abilities and social skills). The KGD could benefit individuals with ASD affected with epileptic episodes as well as those with either PDH or mild respiratory chain (RC) complex deficiencies. Given that the mechanism of action of the KGD is not fully understood, caution should be exercised in ASD cases lacking a careful biochemical and metabolic characterization to avoid deleterious side effects or refractory outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorders; bioenergetics; dietary intervention; epilepsy; ketogenic diet; mitochondria; oxidative stress
Year: 2014 PMID: 25072037 PMCID: PMC4074854 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2014.00069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Examples extracted from the literature on effects of KGD on mitochondrial function with the potential to benefit ASD symptoms.
| Experimental model | Diet/treatment | KGD-dependent effects | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rat hippocampus | Young rats fed KGD for 9 weeks | Increased gene expression of mt genes; 46% increase in mitochondria number with no changes in citrate synthase or any other mt enzymatic activity; [PCr]/[Cr] higher (due to lower [Cr]) | Bough et al. ( |
| Rat hippocampus | Young rats fed KGD for 1 month | Decreased (−30%) body weight than controls; few mt genes overexpressed | Noh et al. ( |
| Rat brain | Fed HFD for 3 weeks | [ATP]/[ADP] increased by 12%; lower [Cr] with no changes in [PCr]; lower [cAMP] and [cGMP] | DeVivo et al. ( |
| Rat hippocampus | Slices from rat hippocampus (4–7 weeks) with BHB and ACA each at 0.5 or 1 mM | KB prevented rotenone- and 3NP-dependent decrease in ATP and decreased 3NP-dependent ROS production | Kim do et al. ( |
| Mouse brain | Mice (8–10 weeks) treated with | BHB restored NADH-supported O2 consumption inhibited by MPP+, partly the one inhibited by rotenone; BHB increased mtROS. 70–80% ATP from BHB produced via Complex I, the remaining via Complex II | Tieu et al. ( |
| Rats | CR-KGD for 7 days | Body weight loss, increased brain expression of IGFR and GLUT3 | Cheng et al. ( |
| Neuronal human SH–SY5Y cell line | FA (C8 or C10) treatment for 1–6 days | Increased citrate synthase and Complex I activities | Hughes et al. ( |
| Rat hippocampus and liver | Rats fed with a 6:1 lipid:non-lipid KGD | Delayed occurrence of epileptic episodes via mTOR inhibition | McDaniel et al. ( |
| Child with Leigh syndrome | KGD | Improvement of cerebral lesions by brain MRI | Wijburg et al. ( |
| Individuals with PDH deficiency (PDHA1 an PDHX mutations) | KGD (lipid:non-lipid 3:1) | KGD improved only paroxysmal dysfunction | Barnerias et al. ( |
| Child, idiopathic PDH deficiency | KGD for ~3 years (lipid:non-lipid 3:1 later switched to 2:1) | Seizure free; improvement in hypotonia, motor development, relationship with environment; poor weight gain, high ketonemia | Di Pisa et al. ( |
| Children with PDHE1 mutations | KGD (varied degrees of carbohydrate restriction) | Improved longevity and mental development | Wexler et al. ( |
| Child with PHDX | KGD (lipid:non-lipid 4:1, later switched to 3:1 plus MCT oil) | Weight gain, decreased seizure episodes, improved sociability and activity | El-Gharbawy et al. ( |
| Children with intractable epilepsy with ETC defects | Age (mean) 45 months, KGD (4:1 lipid:non-lipid) for (mean) 18 months | Eleven of 14 patients decreased seizure frequency by 50–90%; 8 ceased or lowered antiepileptic medications; 8 showed improved cognitive and behavioral functions | Kang et al. ( |
| Mouse hippocampus | Young mice fed a 6:1 lipid:non-lipid KGD for 10–12 d | Decreased mtROS; increases in UCP expression | Sullivan et al. ( |
| Rat hippocampus | Adolescent rats, KGD (78% lipid, 0.76% carbs) for 1, 3 days or 1, 3 weeks | KGD-induced initial mild oxidative stress, activation of Nrf2 pathway | Milder et al. ( |
| Rat cortex, cerebellum, and hippocampus | Adolescent rats fed with KGD or BHB for 3 weeks | Increased GPX activity and [GSH] | Ziegler et al. ( |
| Rat neocortical neurons | Neurons exposed to BHB | Decreased Glu-mediated excitotoxicity mtROS production via increased NADH oxidation | Maalouf et al. ( |
| Mouse forebrain | Ketotic mice fed KGD (50% lipids) for 3 days | Increased GABA and Gln production | Yudkoff et al. ( |
| Cerebrospinal fluid | 26 children with refractory epilepsy fed KGD for 6 months | Increased [GABA], [taurine], [Ser], and [Gly]. Higher [GABA] ( >50–90% seizure reduction) | Dahlin et al. ( |
| Zebrafish with PDHE1 mutation, lower acetylcholine in inner retina | Larvae fed a mix of lauric/myristic/palmitic acid, and phosphatidyl choline | KGD rescued vision and prolong survival | Maurer et al. ( |
| SSDAH mouse model | At PND 12 were fed KGD for 20–30 days | Increased mitochondrial number and size; increased (ATP), no changes in lifespan or neurological outcomes | Nylen et al. ( |
3-NP, 3-nitropropionic acid; AHA, acetoacetate; BHB, β-hydroxybutyrate; CR-KGD, calorie-restricted ketogenic diet; Cr, creatine; Gln, glutamine; Glu, glutamate; Gly, glycine; GPX, glutathione peroxidase; FA, fatty acids; HFD, high-fat diet; IGFR, insulin-like growth factor receptor; Mt, mitochondrial; MCT, medium-chain triglycerides; Nrf2, Nuclear factor-like 2; PCr, phospho-creatine; PND, post-natal day; Ser, serine.
Figure 1β-hydroxybutyrate and ACA are utilized as fuel molecules in all mitochondria-containing tissues (except liver). BHB is oxidized to ACA by β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase at the inner mitochondrial membrane (arrow 1). ACA acquires the CoA moiety from succinylCoA resulting in succinate and acetoacetylCoA (ACACoA; arrow 2). ACACoA releases acetylCoA catalyzed by ACACoA thiolase (arrow 3). AcetylCoA generated from β-oxidation of fatty acids from the diet and acetylCoA generated by the catabolism of KB is condensed into citrate in the Krebs cycle. The increased flux in the right part of this cycle, increases the concentration of α-ketoglutarate (KG) resulting in increases in the production of Glu via glutamate dehydrogenase (arrow 5) or a transaminase (not shown). Glu from these reactions in addition to that formed from the deamination of glutamine (Gln) via glutaminase (arrow 6) result in the generation of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA). The GABA shunt bypasses two steps of the Krebs cycle – the KG dehydrogenase complex and the succinyl coenzyme A (CoA) synthase – for the conversion of KG into succinate. It involves three enzymes: a Glu decarboxylase (GAD; arrow 7), which catalyzes the decarboxylation of glutamate to GABA, a GABA transaminase (arrow 8), which converts GABA to succinate semialdehyde (SSA), and an SSA dehydrogenase (arrow 11), which catalyzes the oxidation of SSA to succinate. SSA can be reduced to γ-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) by an alternative reaction catalyzed by either a hydroxyacid–oxoacid transhydrogenase or SSA reductase (arrows 9, 10).