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Researchers in Dr. D'Agostino's laboratory observed a decreased tumor burden and enhanced survival in animals that were provided a ketone supplement, even if they were fed a high-carbohydrate diet. To discover whether the anti-tumor outcomes were because the animals that consumed ketones ate less, the investigators conducted a calorie-restricted control. Although there was an anti-tumor effect of calorie restriction, it paled in comparison to that achieved with supplemental ketones. In this clip, Dr. Dominic D'Agostino discusses the therapeutic effects of ketones on cancer growth.
Rhonda: So to bring it back to the magic pill, I'm kind of interested. So let's say someone like me that my diet is mostly, I eat a lot of plants, a lot of greens, broad spectrum, carrots, I eat a lot of vegetables. So I get a ton of fiber. I eat a lot of fish. And I do eat, like, beans, so I'm not adverse to legumes or even to oats. I like fiber. Let's say, I wanted to, I'm, like, super-interested in beta-hydroxybutyrate because I've been following a lot of the research from Eric's lab and I want to get some of those benefits. I want to increase my FOXO3. I want to reduce my lipid peroxidation, I want some of that signaling effect. Plus, I want to beta-hydroxybutyrate to be around to get to the brain, things like that. Can I potentially take a beta-hydroxybutyrate, whatever delivery source powder, pill, whatever it is, and potentially achieve some of those same benefits that you get from nutritional ketosis or ketosis from fasting? Let's say, but I don't eat a lot of, I don't eat refined carbs, so I'm not getting a huge insulin spike for the most part. So do you know?
Dom: So, yeah, you want to have your cake and eat it? But you don't eat cake, right?
Rhonda: But I don't eat cake. No, I just eat fiber.
Dom: You want to have your carbs. Yeah, that's that's really what we're working on right now and understanding in a head-to-head comparison to see if we can derive the same kind of benefits from ketone supplementation as we kind of with the ketogenic diet. We know the first kind of convincing studies of this that we did was with CNS oxygen toxicity in our rat model, and in that case, the rats were eating a high-carbohydrate standard rodent chow model, and we administered via an oral route a ketone supplement in the form of a ketone ester. That's probably one of the more powerful forms of exogenous ketones that we've developed. And that had the ability to prevent CNS oxygen toxicity from happening for almost, over 500% delay in that time to CNS oxygen toxicity. And that could not be achieved with fasting, it could not be achieved with anti-seizure drugs. So when it comes to enhancing and preserving brain energy metabolism in the face of a tremendous oxidative stress that breaks down brain energy metabolism, we're able to enhance that, preserve that. So we've also studied in our animal model of cancer, metastatic cancer simply giving ketones to the animals on a high-carbohydrate diet, it was almost unexpected the level of enhanced survival that we had with ketone supplementation.
Rhonda: What kinds of tumor is it?
Dom: This is a model of metastatic cancer and the primary tumor, it was derived from a glioblastoma, the GBM. And that tumor cell line is so aggressive that when it's injected or implanted into the flank of the animal, there's rapid systemic metastasis to all the organs and the brain. And the model that was developed by Professor Tom Seyfried at Boston College.
Rhonda: Didn't he publish a paper on...?
Dom: It made the cover of the "International Journal of Cancer." Yeah, when I wanted to this study initially, I wanted to do a brain tumor model, like with our diet and our stuff. He sort of wouldn't let me use the model. He's like, "Well, use this model of metastatic cancer because it's the most aggressive thing out there and no one will..." He's like, "If you create a cure, something that can cure this animal with metastatic cancer, you basically stumbled upon something that has the potential to cure cancer." So that, kind of, intrigued me. So I knew working with his model would be kind of difficult because the tumor burden...the animal has died so quick from the tumor burden, but it allowed us to screen a variety of things and just using this model understanding that in aggressive metastatic cancer, the cells are highly glycolytic, and they're highly in favor of using glucose and glutamine probably as an energy source. We're looking at ways to target glutamine, but have not really, kind of, implemented that yet in a combination therapy. But regardless, the animals are eating a high-carbohydrate diet with ketone supplementation and it reduced tumor growth and proliferation. We think that the ketones may be altering glucose metabolism.
Rhonda: They induce cell death?
Dom: Well, we think so. There's more, like, sort of, apoptosis in the tumors that were there, but just overall, there's just less tumor growth and less tumor burden and enhanced, most importantly, a 50% to 60% increase in survival time in animals that are supplemented with this. And it wasn't...although the animals tend to eat a little bit less if they're in ketosis, naturally, which makes a ketone supplement kind of an attractive thing for people that are dieting because when you're sending energy to the brain in the form of ketones, it has sort of a satiating effect on your body and it, kind of, shuts off that hypoglycemic trigger that makes you want to binge or crave food.
Rhonda: So is it changing ghrelin and leptin signaling, or...?
Dom: We think so. Yeah, we think so. That's the next thing to look at. It does impact the satiety centers of the brain. It's not like you don't want to eat, but you have control over your appetite.
Rhonda: You know what? I just thought of it. Lauric acid, which is C12, suppresses ghrelin in the gut, which is the hunger hormone... That's kind of interesting, right?
Dom: Is that specific for lauric acid?
Rhonda: It's specific.
Dom: I knew with certain fats. Really, lauric acid? That's interesting.
Rhonda: It is.
Dom: I'll look that up.
Rhonda: Sorry to interrupt. [crosstalk 00:59:39] Let's continue because this is really cool. So you fed them a normal high-carbohydrate diet, gave them this ketone ester, as we were talking about.
Dom: Ketone ester, the same ketone ester, which is.
Rhonda: The tumor burden was decreased, survival time increased.
Dom: Yep, yep. And so that was another demonstration, and the data looked very similar to the ketogenic diet. So we did the study.
Rhonda: They're eating less, you said, right?
Dom: They were eating slightly less, so we went back. We were thinking, "Well, maybe we're just getting a calorie-restriction effect," because if you have a mouse model or any kind of cancer model and you overfeed it the tumors are going to grow faster, and if you underfeed it you're going to restrict some of the tumor growth. So they were eating a little bit less, but a maybe only 10% drop in body weight. So we went back and we did a calorie-restriction control experiment, and although there was a decrease in tumor, it was nothing like the ketone supplement. So ketones we know undoubtedly they have anti-cancer effects, and it could be maybe through their expression of their gene expression as a histone deacetylase inhibitor. We think that they inhibit glycolysis. We think that they influence a number of pathways associated with cancer growth.
Rhonda: Did you measure mitochondrial respiration?
Dom: Of the tumor and the tissue or...?
Rhonda: Just, yeah, of, or any tissue, like, so let's say, did you give them ketones in this....
Dom: We looked at ROS production. Yeah, it can sort of knock down reactive oxygen species production.
Rhonda: In the tumor? Or in...
Dom: In normal tissue, yeah. And now it's kind of interesting, too, that in the tumor tissue in previous experiments, I showed that it could knock it down significantly, but I think in the paper that we published, there was a slight decrease in ROS production.
Rhonda: Yeah, that's interesting.
Dom: We don't know, we do...our experiments are sort of like a top-down approach. We find out what works and then, we're mechanistically going after it and we're doing -omics work metabolomic in particular, and western blots and assays. So now we're going after the mechanism, and if we understand the mechanism, we can, kind of, work backwards and tweak the molecule or adjust the diet in ways that may enhance the therapeutic effects.
Rhonda: It would be really interesting to do some of... I don't know if you can radio label these ketone esters and see if, like...
Dom: Yeah, that's another thing we'll look at.
Rhonda:...are they being used as a carbon source for ATP? Are they being used for something else, right, like...?
Dom: Tracer studies. That's what we want to do. Yeah, we're going to partner with a company that has, sort of, the market on doing these tracer fate associations. I think even doing a 13-Carbon glucose tracer fate association study where we give this, and we give ketones we look at the fate of glucose in the presence and absence of ketones and see how that may be influencing...
Rhonda: There you go, is it going to the pentose phosphate? I mean, this is all stuff I really want to know, so I'm, like, super-excited someone is doing it...
Programmed cell death. Apoptosis is a type of cellular self-destruct mechanism that rids the body of damaged or aged cells. Unlike necrosis, a process in which cells that die as a result of acute injury swell and burst, spilling their contents over their neighbors and causing a potentially damaging inflammatory response, a cell that undergoes apoptosis dies in a neat and orderly fashion – shrinking and condensing, without damaging its neighbors. The process of apoptosis is often blocked or impaired in cancer cells. (May be pronounced “AY-pop-TOE-sis” OR “AP-oh-TOE-sis”.)
A test used in laboratory medicine, pharmacology, environmental biology, and molecular biology to determine the content or quality of specific components.
A chemical produced in the liver via the breakdown of fatty acids. Beta-hydroxybutyrate is a type of ketone body. It can be used to produce energy inside the mitochondria and acts as a signaling molecule that alters gene expression by inhibiting a class of enzymes known as histone deacetylases.
A protein that provides the instructions for genes responsible for the regulation of cellular replication, resistance to oxidative stress, metabolism, and DNA repair. FOXO3 may play an integral part in both longevity and tumor suppression. Variants of FOXO3 are associated with longevity in humans. Humans with a more active version of this gene have a 2.7-fold increased chance of living to be a centenarian.
The process in which information stored in DNA is converted into instructions for making proteins or other molecules. Gene expression is highly regulated. It allows a cell to respond to factors in its environment and involves two processes: transcription and translation. Gene expression can be turned on or off, or it can simply be increased or decreased.
A hormone produced in the gut that signals hunger. Ghrelin acts on cells in the hypothalamus to stimulate appetite, increase food intake, and promote growth. Ghrelin’s effects are opposed by leptin, the “satiety hormone.” Sleep deprivation increases ghrelin levels and feelings of hunger, which can lead to weight gain and metabolic dysfunction.
A fast-growing, aggressive cancer that develops from star-shaped glial cells (astrocytes and oligodendrocytes) within the brain.
One of the most abundant non-essential amino acids in the human body. Glutamine plays key roles in several metabolic functions, including protein and glutathione synthesis, energy production, antioxidant status, and immune function. In addition, it regulates the expression of several genes. Although the body can typically produce all the glutamine it needs, during periods of metabolic stress it must rely on dietary sources of glutamine such as meats, fish, legumes, fruits, and vegetables.
A series of enzyme-dependent reactions that breaks down glucose. Glycolysis converts glucose into pyruvate, releasing energy and producing ATP and NADH. In humans, glycolysis occurs in the cytosol and does not require oxygen.
The chief protein components of chromatin found in eukaryotic cell nuclei that package and order the DNA into structural units called nucleosomes acting as spools around which DNA winds, and playing a role in gene regulation.
A peptide hormone secreted by the beta cells of the pancreatic islets cells. Insulin maintains normal blood glucose levels by facilitating the uptake of glucose into cells; regulating carbohydrate, lipid, and protein metabolism; and promoting cell division and growth. Insulin resistance, a characteristic of type 2 diabetes, is a condition in which normal insulin levels do not produce a biological response, which can lead to high blood glucose levels.
A diet that causes the body to oxidize fat to produce ketones for energy. A ketogenic diet is low in carbohydrates and high in proteins and fats. For many years, the ketogenic diet has been used in the clinical setting to reduce seizures in children. It is currently being investigated for the treatment of traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer's disease, weight loss, and cancer.
A medium chain fatty acid that is composed of 12 hydrocarbons that has very potent antiviral activity, particularly against viruses that contain a viral envelope. It also has antibacterial activity and it plays a role in appetite suppression. Coconut oil is a good source of lauric acid.
A hormone produced primarily by adipocytes (fat cells) that signals a feeling of satiety, or fullness, after a meal. Leptin acts on cells in the hypothalamus to reduce appetite and subsequent food intake. Leptin’s effects are opposed by ghrelin, the “hunger hormone.” Both acute and chronic sleep deprivation decrease leptin levels.
The thousands of biochemical processes that run all of the various cellular processes that produce energy. Since energy generation is so fundamental to all other processes, in some cases the word metabolism may refer more broadly to the sum of all chemical reactions in the cell.
Cancer that has spread from the part of the body where it started to other parts of the body. When cancer cells break away from a tumor, they can travel to other areas of the body through the bloodstream or the lymph system.
Tiny organelles inside cells that produce energy in the presence of oxygen. Mitochondria are referred to as the "powerhouses of the cell" because of their role in the production of ATP (adenosine triphosphate). Mitochondria are continuously undergoing a process of self-renewal known as mitophagy in order to repair damage that occurs during their energy-generating activities.
A chemical reaction in which an atom, molecule, or ion loses one or more electrons. Oxidation of biological molecules is associated with oxidative stress, a key driver of many chronic diseases.
A result of oxidative metabolism, which causes damage to DNA, lipids, proteins, mitochondria, and the cell. Oxidative stress occurs through the process of oxidative phosphorylation (the generation of energy) in mitochondria. It can also result from the generation of hypochlorite during immune activation.
An alternate pathway for the oxidation of glucose. The pentose phosphate pathway parallels glycolysis, but does not require or produce ATP; rather, it produces NADPH, which is necessary to create the cellular antioxidant glutathione. Like glycolysis, the pentose phosphate pathway occurs in the cytoplasm.
Oxygen-containing chemically-reactive molecules generated by oxidative phosphorylation and immune activation. ROS can damage cellular components, including lipids, proteins, mitochondria, and DNA. Examples of ROS include: peroxides, superoxide, hydroxyl radical, and singlet oxygen.
A related byproduct, reactive nitrogen species, is also produced naturally by the immune system. Examples of RNS include nitric oxide, peroxynitrite, and nitrogen dioxide.
The two species are often collectively referred to as ROS/RNS. Preventing and efficiently repairing damage from ROS (oxidative stress) and RNS (nitrosative stress) are among the key challenges our cells face in their fight against diseases of aging, including cancer.
Cellular respiration is the process by which oxygen is utilized to generate energy inside of the mitochondria.
Sometimes called the protein immunoblot. Used to detect specific proteins in a sample of tissue homogenate or extract. It uses gel electrophoresis to separate native proteins by 3-D structure or denatured proteins by the length of the polypeptide. The proteins are then transferred to a membrane (typically nitrocellulose or PVDF), where they are stained with antibodies specific to the target protein.
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