Kuter Katarzyna Z, Olech Łukasz, Głowacka Urszula, Paleczna Martyna
Deptartment of Neuropsychopharmacology, Maj Institute of Pharmacology Polish Academy of Sciences, Smętna 12 St., 31-343 Krakow, Poland.
Int J Mol Sci. 2021 Jul 14;22(14):7556. doi: 10.3390/ijms22147556.
The benefits of a ketogenic diet in childhood epilepsy steered up hope for neuroprotective effects of hyperketonemia in Parkinson's disease (PD). There are multiple theoretical reasons but very little actual experimental proof or clinical trials. We examined the long-term effects of the ketogenic diet in an animal model of early PD. A progressive, selective dopaminergic medium size lesion was induced by 6-OHDA injection into the medial forebrain bundle. Animals were kept on the stringent ketogenic diet (1% carbohydrates, 8% protein, 70% fat) for 3 weeks prior and 4 weeks after the brain operation. Locomotor activity, neuron count, dopaminergic terminal density, dopamine level, and turnover were analyzed at three time-points post-lesion, up to 4 weeks after the operation. Energy metabolism parameters (glycogen, mitochondrial complex I and IV, lactate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, glucose) were analyzed in the brain and liver or plasma. Protein expression of enzymes essential for gluconeogenesis (PEPCK, G6PC) and glucose utilization (GCK) was analyzed in the liver. Despite long-term hyperketonemia pre- and post-lesion, the ketogenic diet did not protect against 6-OHDA-induced dopaminergic neuron lesions. The ketogenic diet only tended to improve locomotor activity and normalize DA turnover in the striatum. Rats fed 7 weeks in total with a restrictive ketogenic diet maintained normoglycemia, and neither gluconeogenesis nor glycogenolysis in the liver was responsible for this effect. Therefore, potentially, the ketogenic diet could be therapeutically helpful to support the late compensatory mechanisms active via glial cells but does not necessarily act against the oxidative stress-induced parkinsonian neurodegeneration itself. A word of caution is required as the stringent ketogenic diet itself also carries the risk of unwanted side effects, so it is important to study the long-term effects of such treatments. More detailed metabolic long-term studies using unified diet parameters are required, and human vs. animal differences should be taken under consideration.
生酮饮食对儿童癫痫的益处引发了人们对高酮血症在帕金森病(PD)中神经保护作用的希望。虽然有多种理论依据,但实际的实验证据或临床试验却很少。我们在早期PD动物模型中研究了生酮饮食的长期影响。通过向内侧前脑束注射6-羟基多巴胺(6-OHDA)诱导进行性、选择性多巴胺能中尺寸损伤。在脑部手术前3周和手术后4周,让动物维持严格的生酮饮食(1%碳水化合物、8%蛋白质、70%脂肪)。在损伤后的三个时间点(直至手术后4周)分析运动活动、神经元计数、多巴胺能终末密度、多巴胺水平和周转率。分析脑、肝或血浆中的能量代谢参数(糖原、线粒体复合物I和IV、乳酸、β-羟基丁酸、葡萄糖)。分析肝脏中糖异生(磷酸烯醇式丙酮酸羧激酶、葡萄糖-6-磷酸酶)和葡萄糖利用(葡萄糖激酶)所需酶的蛋白表达。尽管损伤前后长期处于高酮血症状态,但生酮饮食并不能预防6-OHDA诱导的多巴胺能神经元损伤。生酮饮食仅倾向于改善运动活动并使纹状体中的多巴胺周转率正常化。总共喂食7周严格生酮饮食的大鼠维持血糖正常,肝脏中的糖异生和糖原分解均与此效应无关。因此,生酮饮食可能在治疗上有助于支持通过胶质细胞起作用的晚期代偿机制,但不一定能对抗氧化应激诱导的帕金森神经变性本身。需要提醒的是,严格的生酮饮食本身也存在不良副作用的风险,因此研究此类治疗的长期影响很重要。需要使用统一的饮食参数进行更详细的代谢长期研究,并考虑人与动物的差异。