Christine A. Olson, Helen E. Vuong, Jessica M. Yano,
Qingxing Y. Liang, David J. Nusbaum, Elaine Y. Hsiao. The Gut Microbiota
Mediates the Anti-Seizure Effects of the Ketogenic Diet. Cell.
In press.
Highlights
•Changes in the gut microbiota are required for the
anti-seizure effects of the KD
•Specific KD-associated bacteria mediate and confer the
anti-seizure effects of the KD
•KD microbiota regulate amino acid γ-glutamylation and hippocampal
GABA/glutamate
Summary
The ketogenic diet (KD) is used to treat refractory
epilepsy, but the mechanisms underlying its neuroprotective effects remain
unclear. Here, we show that the gut microbiota is altered by the KD and
required for protection against acute electrically induced seizures and
spontaneous tonic-clonic seizures in two mouse models. Mice treated with
antibiotics or reared germ free are resistant to KD-mediated seizure
protection. Enrichment of, and gnotobiotic co-colonization with, KD-associated
Akkermansia and Parabacteroides restores seizure protection. Moreover,
transplantation of the KD gut microbiota and treatment with Akkermansia and
Parabacteroides each confer seizure protection to mice fed a control diet.
Alterations in colonic lumenal, serum, and hippocampal metabolomic profiles
correlate with seizure protection, including reductions in systemic
gamma-glutamylated amino acids and elevated hippocampal GABA/glutamate levels.
Bacterial cross-feeding decreases gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase activity, and
inhibiting gamma-glutamylation promotes seizure protection in vivo. Overall,
this study reveals that the gut microbiota modulates host metabolism and
seizure susceptibility in mice.
Courtesy of: https://www.medpagetoday.com/neurology/generalneurology/73144
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