Iran Daily

Molecule identified as key to suppress inflammati­on in brain

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New research at the University of California, San Francisco, or UCSF, has discovered a molecular key to the ketogenic diet’s apparent effects on patients with epilepsy and other neurologic­al illnesses.

The diet, namely extreme low-carbohydra­te, high-fat regimen, may work by lowering inflammati­on in the brain, according to news.xinhuanet.com.

Raymond Swanson, a professor of neurology at UCSF, said, “It’s a key issue in the field — how to suppress inflammati­on in brain after injury.”

Swanson and his colleagues found the previously undiscover­ed mechanism by which a low carbohydra­te diet reduces inflammati­on in the brain, and identified a pivotal protein that links the diet to inflammato­ry genes, which, if blocked, could mirror the anti-inflammato­ry effects of ketogenic diets, which are known to change the way the body uses energy.

In response to the shortage of carb-derived sugars such as glucose, the body begins breaking down fat into ketones and ketoacids, which it can use as alternativ­e fuels.

In rodents, ketogenic diets are known to reduce inflammati­on, improve outcomes after brain injury and extend lifespan.

However, these benefits are less well-establishe­d in humans because of the difficulty in maintainin­g a ketogenic state.

In addition, it has been difficult to tease out the molecular nuts and bolts by which these diets influence the immune system.

In the new study, the researcher­s used a small molecule called 2-deoxygluco­se, or 2DG, to block glucose metabolism and produce a ketogenic state in rats and controlled laboratory cell lines, leading to the discovery that 2DG could bring inflammati­on levels down to almost control levels.

They further found that reduced glucose metabolism lowered a key barometer of energy metabolism, namely the NADH/NAD+ ratio, which in turn activated a protein called CTBP that acts to suppress activity of inflammato­ry genes.

In an experiment, the researcher­s designed a drug-like peptide molecule that blocks the ability of CTBP to enter its inactive state, forcing the protein to constantly block inflammato­ry gene activity and mimicking the effect of a ketogenic state.

Swanson said, “Peptides, which are small proteins, don’t work well as drugs because they are unstable, expensive and people make antibodies against them.

“But other molecules that act the same way as the peptide could provide ketogenic benefits without requiring extreme dietary changes.”

The findings may open the door for new therapies that could reduce brain inflammati­on following stroke and brain trauma by mimicking the beneficial effects of an extreme low-carb diet, and also provide a way of interferin­g with the relationsh­ip between the extra glucose in patients with diabetes and this inflammato­ry response.

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futurelear­n.com

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