Abstract

Prenatal factors influence autism spectrum disorder (ASD) incidence in children and can increase ASD symptoms in offspring of animal models. These may include maternal immune activation (MIA) due to viral or bacterial infection during the first trimesters. Unfortunately, regardless of ASD etiology, existing drugs are poorly effective against core symptoms. For nearly a century a ketogenic diet (KD) has been used to treat seizures, and recent insights into mechanisms of ASD and a growing recognition that immune/inflammatory conditions exacerbate ASD risk has increased interest in KD as a treatment for ASD. Here we studied the effects of KD on core ASD symptoms in offspring exposed to MIA. To produce MIA, pregnant C57Bl/6 mice were injected with the viral mimic polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid; after weaning offspring were fed KD or control diet for three weeks. Consistent with an ASD phenotype of a higher incidence in males, control diet-fed MIA male offspring were not social and exhibited high levels of repetitive self-directed behaviors; female offspring were unaffected. However, KD feeding partially or completely reversed all MIA-induced behavioral abnormalities in males; it had no effect on behavior in females. KD-induced metabolic changes of reduced blood glucose and elevated blood ketones were quantified in offspring of both sexes. Prior work from our laboratory and others demonstrate KDs improve relevant behaviors in several ASD models, and here we demonstrate clear benefits of KD in the MIA model of ASD. Together these studies suggest a broad utility for metabolic therapy in improving core ASD symptoms, and support further research to develop and apply ketogenic and/or metabolic strategies in patients with ASD.

Highlights

  • Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is defined by poor sociability and communication alongside increased repetitive behaviors or limited behavioral repertoires

  • ketogenic diet (KD)-fed maternal immune activation (MIA) offspring had the hallmark blood chemistry changes associated with this metabolic treatment, i.e. ketonemia and lowered glucose (Fig 1; ketones F = 34.6, p

  • Ketogenic diet and maternal immune activation-induced autism treatment, and this effect was partially reversed by KD feeding. **p

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Summary

Introduction

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is defined by poor sociability and communication alongside increased repetitive behaviors or limited behavioral repertoires. ASD is defined by specific behavioral criteria, there is a multitude of genetic and/or environmental contributors, and most often the etiology is unknown and is likely heterogenous [1]. This inherent complexity and mystery surrounding ASD contributes to and compounds the lack of effective treatments for core behavioral symptoms. Current knowledge suggests environmental factors are PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0171643. Ketogenic diet and maternal immune activation-induced autism Current knowledge suggests environmental factors are PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0171643 February 6, 2017

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