Ketogenic diet administration to mice after a high-fat-diet regimen promotes weight loss, glycemic normalization and induces adaptations of ketogenic pathways in liver and kidney

Mol Metab. 2022 Nov:65:101578. doi: 10.1016/j.molmet.2022.101578. Epub 2022 Aug 20.

Abstract

Objective: The ketogenic diet (KD), characterized by very limited dietary carbohydrate intake and used as nutritional treatment for GLUT1-deficiency syndromes and pharmacologically refractory epilepsy, may promote weight loss and improve metabolic fitness, potentially alleviating the symptoms of osteoarthritis. Here, we have studied the effects of administration of a ketogenic diet in mice previously rendered obese by feeding a high fat diet (HFD) and submitted to surgical destabilization of the medial meniscus to mimic osteoarthritis.

Methods: 6-weeks old mice were fed an HFD for 10 weeks and then switched to a chow diet (CD), KD or maintained on a HFD for 8 weeks. Glycemia, β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB), body weight and fat mass were compared among groups. In liver and kidney, protein expression and histone post-translational modifications were assessed by Western blot, and gene expression by quantitative Real-Time PCR.

Results: After a 10 weeks HDF feeding, administration for 8 weeks of a KD or CD induced a comparable weight loss and decrease in fat mass, with better glycemic normalization in the KD group. Histone β-hydroxybutyrylation, but not histone acetylation, was increased in the liver and kidney of mice fed the KD and the rate-limiting ketogenic enzyme HMGCS2 was upregulated - at the gene and protein level - in liver and, to an even greater extent, in kidney. KD-induced HMGCS2 overexpression may be dependent on FGF21, whose gene expression was increased by KD in liver.

Conclusions: Over a period of 8 weeks, KD is more effective than a chow diet to induce metabolic normalization. Besides acting as a fuel molecule, BHB may exert its metabolic effects through modulation of the epigenome - via histone β-hydroxybutyrylation - and extensive transcriptional modulation in liver and kidney.

Keywords: HMGCS2; Histone PTMs; Ketogenesis; Ketogenic diet; β-hydroxybutyrate.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • 3-Hydroxybutyric Acid / metabolism
  • Animals
  • Blood Glucose / metabolism
  • Diet, High-Fat / adverse effects
  • Diet, Ketogenic*
  • Dietary Carbohydrates / metabolism
  • Glucose Transporter Type 1 / metabolism
  • Ketone Bodies / metabolism
  • Kidney / metabolism
  • Liver / metabolism
  • Mice
  • Osteoarthritis* / metabolism
  • Weight Loss

Substances

  • Blood Glucose
  • Dietary Carbohydrates
  • Glucose Transporter Type 1
  • Ketone Bodies
  • 3-Hydroxybutyric Acid