Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a common neurological disorder whose outcomes vary widely depending on a variety of environmental factors, including diet. Using a Drosophila melanogaster TBI model that reproduces key aspects of TBI in humans, we previously found that the diet consumed immediately following a primary brain injury has a substantial effect on the incidence of mortality within 24 h (early mortality). Flies that receive equivalent primary injuries have a higher incidence of early mortality when fed high-carbohydrate diets versus water. Here, we report that flies fed high-fat ketogenic diet (KD) following TBI exhibited early mortality that was equivalent to that of flies fed water and that flies protected from early mortality by KD continued to show survival benefits weeks later. KD also has beneficial effects in mammalian TBI models, indicating that the mechanism of action of KD is evolutionarily conserved. To probe the mechanism, we examined the effect of KD in flies mutant for Eip75B, an ortholog of the transcription factor PPARγ (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma) that contributes to the mechanism of action of KD and has neuroprotective effects in mammalian TBI models. We found that the incidence of early mortality of Eip75B mutant flies was higher when they were fed KD than when they were fed water following TBI. These data indicate that Eip75B/PPARγ is necessary for the beneficial effects of KD following TBI. In summary, this work provides the first evidence that KD activates PPARγ to reduce deleterious outcomes of TBI and it demonstrates the utility of the fly TBI model for dissecting molecular pathways that contribute to heterogeneity in TBI outcomes.

Highlights

  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major health issue worldwide [1]

  • To further explore the effect of diet on the Mortality Index at 24 hours (MI24), we examined different concentrations of cornmeal-molassesyeast diet (CMYD), yeast diet (YD, S. cerevisiae), and ketogenic diet (KD, a commercial mouse ketogenic diet)

  • We discovered that an interaction between the genetic factor Eip75B/PPARγ and the environmental factor KD affects early mortality in a fly TBI model

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Summary

Introduction

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major health issue worldwide [1]. It is a leading cause of disability and death, and its clinical management is challenging because the physical, behavioral, cognitive, and emotional sequelae are highly variable. Ketogenic diet reduces early mortality following TBI in flies via Eip75B/PPARγ

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