A ketogenic diet differentially affects neuron and astrocyte transcription.
Scott J KoppelDong PeiHeather M WilkinsIan W WeidlingXiaowan WangBlaise W MentaJudit Perez-OrtizAnuradha KalaniSharon ManleyLesya NovikovaDevin C KoestlerRussell H SwerdlowPublished in: Journal of neurochemistry (2021)
Ketogenic diets (KDs) alter brain metabolism. Multiple mechanisms may account for their effects, and different brain regions may variably respond. Here, we considered how a KD affects brain neuron and astrocyte transcription. We placed male C57Bl6/N mice on either a 3-month KD or chow diet, generated enriched neuron and astrocyte fractions, and used RNA-Seq to assess transcription. Neurons from KD-treated mice generally showed transcriptional pathway activation while their astrocytes showed a mix of transcriptional pathway suppression and activation. The KD especially affected pathways implicated in mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum function, insulin signaling, and inflammation. An unbiased analysis of KD-associated expression changes strongly implicated transcriptional pathways altered in AD, which prompted us to explore in more detail the potential molecular relevance of a KD to AD. Our results indicate a KD differently affects neurons and astrocytes, and provide unbiased evidence that KD-induced brain effects are potentially relevant to neurodegenerative diseases such as AD.