Showing posts with label fuel-ketones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fuel-ketones. Show all posts

Saturday, 30 March 2013

Brain's Use of 'Alternative Energy' May Be Related to Alzheimer's - Dana Foundation

By Jim Schnabe - February 23, 2011
How does amyloid beta protein (A-beta) harm cells in Alzheimer’s disease? Why is this harm concentrated in certain brain regions? Researchers don’t know, but two studies published in the Oct. 12, 2010, edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggest a plausible explanation.

According to the studies, the regions where A-beta deposits are seen in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s closely match the regions that normally rely heavily on less-efficient but faster processes of energy production in cells. The studies’ authors propose that A-beta in its disease-driving forms might impair these processes, and thus might principally harm the brain regions that most depend on them.

“It really opens up a lot of questions,” says Pierre Magistretti, a neurobiologist and brain metabolism researcher at the Ecole Polytechnique Federal in Lausanne, Switzerland, who wasn’t involved in the research. Magistretti is a vice-chairman of the European Dana Alliance for the Brain.

“It suggests that we should expand our view of what the cell-biological problem in Alzheimer’s might be,” says Marcus Raichle, a neurologist and neurobiologist at Washington University at St. Louis who was senior author of one of the two papers. Raichle is a member of the Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives.

Glycolysis for speed

The basic energy-molecule used by living cells is adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Adult cells usually make it in a multi-step process that includes the simple sugar glucose and oxygen and leaves water and carbon dioxide as byproducts. But there are faster, less-efficient ways of turning glucose into ATP, and some cellular processes in the brain depend on them. These faster processes, which don’t require oxygen, account for only 10–15 percent the adult brain’s use of glucose and are used more extensively by fetal cells and cancer cells, and by muscle cells during intense exercise.

Raichle has been researching brain metabolism for several decades, including developing functional imaging technology that tracks the brain’s use of glucose and oxygen. In a paper in Science in 1988, he and his colleagues found that these non-oxygen-consuming uses of glucose in the brain increase temporarily when brain activity increases. “The question of what is really going on there has been lingering in the back of my mind since then,” he says.

Several years ago, Raichle informally examined brain-metabolism data taken during functional imaging experiments and noticed that these alternative uses of glucose seemed to vary considerably from region to region in ordinary brains. Also piquing his interest was the observation that the regions that relied the most on these alternate energy processes appeared to be the ones that make up the “default mode network,” a set of brain regions that are relatively active when a person is not engaged in any specific task.

Raichle and his fellow metabolism researchers pioneered research on the default mode network, but in recent years Alzheimer’s researchers have taken an interest too, because the regions that make up the network are also the ones that gather the most A-beta deposits. That connection prompted Raichle and his colleagues to set up a formal set of studies.

In one study of 33 young adults, the researchers mapped the levels of these non-oxygen burning uses of glucose in resting brains, using positron emission tomography (PET) scans. They found that the levels of “aerobic glycolysis”—a catchall term for these alternative processes—did vary throughout the brain, and corresponded closely to the default mode network. In the second study, the researchers found a strong correspondence between the more aerobic-glycolysis-dependent regions in these 33 young brains and the regions that had accumulated signs of A-beta plaques in brain-imaging of 39 elderly people. The plaques largely spared the regions that showed average or below-average aerobic glycolysis—even if their overall energy use was high, such as in the visual cortex.

One possible explanation for the finding is that these alternate glucose uses are especially vulnerable to disruption by A-beta. For example, Raichle points out that glucose-fuelled processes are used by helper cells known as astrocytes to keep concentrations of the neurotransmitter glutamate below toxic levels in the synapses of cortical neurons. In principle, disruption of these processes by A-beta could lead to the deaths of the neurons. Magistretti’s group recently showed that A-beta in its disease-causing forms does alter the metabolism of astrocytes, apparently putting them under stress and ultimately weakening the neurons they are meant to protect. “One of the things that astrocytes do is to remove A-beta from the extracellular space, and then somehow they have to degrade it, but this is an extra burden for them,” says Magistretti.

Recent studies also have linked Alzheimer’s to G3PD, an enzyme that among other functions is needed for glucose-fuelled glutamate management:  People with ordinary late-onset Alzheimer’s are more likely to have certain variants of G3PD, which may be less functional than normal; and A-beta clusters have been reported to cause G3PD to aggregate and become dysfunctional.

Magistretti suggests that one way to investigate further would be “to follow from an early age, in transgenic mice that overexpress A-beta, their glucose utilization and their A-beta deposits, and see how they develop over time.”

William Powers, a neurologist at the University of North Carolina whose own research has uncovered evidence of a similar abnormality in glycolysis in Huntington’s disease, suggests testing to see whether glucose use affects A-beta deposition rather than vice-versa. “This could be done in an animal model of Alzheimer’s by feeding a diet high in fat and low in carbohydrates, which will reduce glucose availability to the brain and decrease cerebral glucose metabolism,” he says.

Helping the brain use alternative fuel may ease symptoms of Alzheimer's

By (BPT) - March 11, 2013

(BPT) - Whether a patient faces a simple health problem, such as a head cold, or one as complex as Alzheimer’s disease, relieving the symptoms is often as important as resolving the issue itself. Yet for the more than 5 million Americans affected by Alzheimer’s, treating the symptoms is even more vital.
Some of the early signs of Alzheimer’s include memory loss that disrupts daily life, mood and personality changes, and difficulty solving otherwise simple daily tasks.

Alzheimer’s disease is the sixth-leading cause of death in the United States, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. Of the top 10 causes of death, it is the only one for which there is no cure or preventive measure. However, research suggests that addressing one early facet of the disease – decreased blood sugar in brain cells, also known as diminished cerebral glucose metabolism (DCGM) – may help relieve symptoms for certain people with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s.
In a healthy brain, glucose is the primary energy source. A brain affected by Alzheimer’s doesn’t process glucose into energy as efficiently as a healthy brain.

“Unlike other cells in the body that can metabolize fats as fuel, brain cells rely on glucose (sugar) for their primary energy source,” says Dr. Richard S. Isaacson, associate professor of clinical neurology and vice chair of education at the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine. "One aspect of Alzheimer’s is that it hinders the brain’s ability to use glucose, and this significantly affects brain function.”

“DCGM is an early feature of Alzheimer’s disease, represented by region-specific declines in brain glucose – or energy – metabolism,” Isaacson says. “DCGM correlates with both the cognitive decline and the pathology associated with Alzheimer’s. Research suggests that addressing DCGM may help mitigate symptoms for some patients.”

Providing brain cells with an alternative energy source may help ease the effects of DCGM, while enhancing memory and cognitive function in Alzheimer’s patients. One prescription-only medical food aims at helping Alzheimer’s patients by addressing DCGM – Axona by Accera, Inc.

The easy-to-mix, once-daily drink is currently the only prescription therapy for patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s that addresses the link between the brain’s inability to process and use glucose with the degenerative symptoms of Alzheimer’s by providing the brain with an alternative energy source. The liver digests and metabolizes Axona to produce the naturally occurring compounds – ketones– that the brain can use as an alternative energy source. Patients or caregivers mix the powder with other liquids or foods and take it once a day in conjunction with commonly prescribed Alzheimer’s medications.

“More research is necessary to determine the exact reasons why DCGM can have profound effects on cognition over the long term,” Isaacson says. “When blood glucose drops rapidly, significant decline in cognitive function occurs and may be accompanied by confusion, coma and even brain death.”
While Axona is not a cure for Alzheimer’s, it can help some patients mitigate the symptoms of the disease. Doctors and caregivers of patients using Axona have reported patients appear more alert and engaged in daily activities and conversations. “If you or a family member experience symptoms such as poor short-term memory, changes in behavior and difficulty with language, see your doctor for a full evaluation,” says Isaacson.

To learn more about Alzheimer’s disease, visit www.alz.org, the website of the Alzheimer’s Association. For more information on DCGM and Axona, visit www.about-axona.com.