| Literature DB >> 31720986 |
Amanda Cabrera-Mulero1,2, Alberto Tinahones1, Borja Bandera1,2, Isabel Moreno-Indias1,2, Manuel Macías-González3,4, Francisco J Tinahones1,2.
Abstract
Gut microbiota (GM) is a key contributor to host metabolism and physiology. Data generated on comparing diseased and healthy subjects have reported changes in the GM profile between both health states, suggesting certain bacterial composition could be involved in pathogenesis. Moreover, studies reported that reshaping of GM could contribute actively to disease recovery. Interestingly, ketogenic diets (KD) have emerged recently as new economic dietotherapeutic strategy to combat a myriad of diseases (refractory epilepsy, obesity, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases…). KD, understood in a broad sense, refers to whatever dietetic approximation, which causes physiological ketosis. Therefore, high fat-low carbs diets, fasting periods or caloric restriction constitute different strategies to produce an increase of main ketones bodies, acetoacetate and β-hydroxybutyrate, in blood. Involved biological mechanisms in ketotherapeutic effects are still to be unravelled. However, it has been pointed out that GM remodelling by KD, from now on "keto microbiota", may play a crucial role in patient response to KD treatment. In fact, germ-free animals were resistant to ketotherapeutic effects; reinforcing keto microbiota may be a powerful contributor to host disease recovery. In this review, we will comment the influence of gut microbiota on host, as well as, therapeutic potential of ketogenic diets and keto microbiota to restore health status. Current progress and limitations will be argued too. In spite of few studies have defined applicability and mechanisms of KD, in the light of results, keto microbiota might be a new useful therapeutic agent.Entities:
Keywords: Dysbiosis; Gut microbiota; Keto microbiota; Ketogenic diets; Ketosis; Metabolites
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31720986 PMCID: PMC6938789 DOI: 10.1007/s11154-019-09518-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Endocr Metab Disord ISSN: 1389-9155 Impact factor: 6.514
Fig. 1Gut microbiota is a key contributor to host metabolism and physiology. Ketogenic diet and/or keto microbiota might restore health state by regulating multiple mechanisms, which remain unknown. Yin Yang symbol represents host-microbial mutualism
main gut microbiota changes produced by KD treatment. Generally, CKD is related to diversity decrease [5, 33, 36], while, CR did not decrease diversity [42, 43]. CKD: Classical ketogenic diet (high fat, adecuate protein low carbs). CR: caloric restriction or energy restriction
| Type of KD | Human vs animal | Disease | KD duration | Phylum | Family | Genus | Species | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CKD | Human (children) | Refractory epilepsy Responders | 6 months | Increase | [ | |||
CKD Zeneca | Human (children) | Refractory epilepsy Responder | 1 week | Increase | [ | |||
| CKD | Human | GLUT1 deficiency syndrome | 3 months | Increase | [ | |||
| CKD | Mouse | Refractory epilepsy | 14 days | Increase | Increase | Increase | [ | |
| CKD | Human | Multiple Sclerosis | 6 months | Increase | [ | |||
| CKD | Mouse | Autism | 14 days | Increase | Decrease | [ | ||
| CKD | Mouse | Refractory-epilepsy | 14 days | Increase | Increase | Increase | [ | |
CR VLCD | Human | obesity | 4 weeks | Decrease | Increase | Increase Decrease | [ | |
| CR 25% | Mouse | 14 days | Decrease | Increase | Decrease | [ | ||
| Fasting periods | Human | 1 week | Increase | [ | ||||
| Fasting | Hamster | 96 h | Increase | Increase | Increase | [ |
Fig. 2Ketogenic diets may modulate microbiota profile, epigenetic mark, and metabolic reprogramming, as well as many others. Those components could act interdependent and interrelated to many others. Exact biological mechanisms responsible for ketotherapeutic effects are still to be unravelled
Beneficial therapeutic effects of KD in different diseases and defined biological mechanisms, which could be involved in advantages of KD
| Type of KD tested | Disease | Effect | Involved biological mechanisms allegedly derived by KD |
|---|---|---|---|
Fasting Classic ketogenic diet | Refractory epilepsy | Seizure protection [ | Increase gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) Decrease glutamate pH alteration affecting excitability GABA Microbiota profile reshape |
Caloric restriction Classic ketogenic diet Fasting periods | Obesity | Weight loss and metabolic profile improvement [ | Appetite suppression by ketone bodies Gut microbiota profile and its metabolites change Brown adipose tissue activation (increase uncoupling protein UCP1 expression) Loss of fat (not lean mass) Increase metabolic cost of gluconeogenesis Increase lipogenesis and decrease lipolysis Metabolic improvements, browning and fat loss associated with microbiota remodelling |
Caloric restriction Classic ketogenic diet | DT2 | Improve insulin sensitivity and glycaemic control [ | Decrease inflammation Reduce insulin Lipid profile improvement Decrease body weight, glycaemia, glycosylated haemoglobin, triglyceride level and LDL cholesterol Increased HDL cholesterol levels Greater weight loss than other diets in the short term Remarkable metabolic improvement Reduced or even withdrawn antidiabetic treatment |
Classic ketogenic diet Ketone supplements | Alzheimer | Improve motor performance and cognition [ | Compensate for the deficiency in glucose metabolism Decrease glutamate Increase GABA Decrease reactive oxygen species (ROS) Decrease Inflammation Enhancing metabolism Metabolic state improvement Increase neurovascular integrity Application of theory brain-gut-microbiota axis |
| Classic ketogenic diet | Multiple Sclerosis | Normalized concentrations of the colonic microbiome [ | Restore colonic microbiome Application of theory brain-gut-microbiota axis |
| Classic ketogenic diet | Autism | Mitigate some of the neurological symptoms associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder [ | Application of theory brain-gut-microbiota axis |
| Fasting | Cardiovascular | Improve cardiovascular health [ | Supply of ketone bodies to the heart where KBs are efficiently oxidized Synergic actions between butyrate production by gut bacteria and circulating high blood ketones Application of theory gut–heart metabolic axis |
Caloric Restriction Classic ketogenic diet | Cancer | Tumor growth decrease Increase survival patient [ | Cancer cell starvation (glucose privation reduce energy production of cancer cells) Repress Warburg effect Decrease inflammation Decrease insulin and insulin growing factor Decrease angiogenesis Decrease PI3K/Akt signalling (a known pathway involved in carcinogenesis) Increase apoptosis Affect tumor epigenetic Avoid cachexia (inhibition of muscle and body weight loss) Sensitize cancer cells to oncological treatment |