Neuroprotection in diet-induced ketotic rat brain after focal ischemia

作者:Puchowicz Michelle A*; Zechel Jennifer L; Valerio Jose; Emancipator Douglas S; Xu Kui; Pundik Svetlana; LaManna Joseph C; Lust W David
来源:Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 2008, 28(12): 1907-1916.
DOI:10.1038/jcbfm.2008.79

摘要

Neuroprotective properties of ketosis may be related to the upregulation of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1 alpha, a primary constituent associated with hypoxic angiogenesis and a regulator of neuroprotective responses. The rationale that the utilization of ketones by the brain results in elevation of intracellular succinate, a known inhibitor of prolyl hydroxylase (the enzyme responsible for the degradation of HIF-1 alpha) was deemed as a potential mechanism of ketosis on the upregulation of HIF-1 alpha. The neuroprotective effect of diet-induced ketosis (3 weeks of feeding a ketogenic diet), as pretreatment, on infarct volume, after reversible middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO), and the upregulation of HIF-1 alpha were investigated. The effect of beta-hydroxybutyrate (BHB), as a pretreatment, via intraventricular infusion (4 days of infusion before stroke) was also investigated following MCAO. Levels of HIF-1 alpha and Bcl-2 (anti-apoptotic protein) proteins and succinate content were measured. A 55% or 70% reduction in infarct volume was observed with BHB infusion or diet-induced ketosis, respectively. The levels of HIF-1 alpha and Bcl-2 proteins increased threefold with diet-induced ketosis; BHB infusions also resulted in increases in these proteins. As hypothesized, succinate content increased by 55% with diet-induced ketosis and fourfold with BHB infusion. In conclusion, the biochemical link between ketosis and the stabilization of HIF-1 alpha is through the elevation of succinate, and both HIF-1 alpha stabilization and Bcl-2 upregulation play a role in ketone-induced neuroprotection in the brain.

  • 出版日期2008-12