Communications Medicine (Jan 2025)

Consuming a modified Mediterranean ketogenic diet reverses the peripheral lipid signature of Alzheimer’s disease in humans

  • Bryan J. Neth,
  • Kevin Huynh,
  • Corey Giles,
  • Tingting Wang,
  • Natalie A. Mellett,
  • Thy Duong,
  • Colette Blach,
  • Leyla Schimmel,
  • Thomas C. Register,
  • Kaj Blennow,
  • Henrik Zetterberg,
  • Richa Batra,
  • Annalise Schweickart,
  • Amanda Hazel Dilmore,
  • Cameron Martino,
  • Matthias Arnold,
  • Jan Krumsiek,
  • Xianlin Han,
  • Pieter C. Dorrestein,
  • Rob Knight,
  • Peter J. Meikle,
  • Suzanne Craft,
  • Rima Kaddurah-Daouk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-024-00682-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a major neurodegenerative disorder with significant environmental factors, including diet and lifestyle, influencing its onset and progression. Although previous studies have suggested that certain diets may reduce the incidence of AD, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Method In this post-hoc analysis of a randomized crossover study of 20 elderly adults, we investigated the effects of a modified Mediterranean ketogenic diet (MMKD) on the plasma lipidome in the context of AD biomarkers, analyzing 784 lipid species across 47 classes using a targeted lipidomics platform. Results Here we identified substantial changes in response to MMKD intervention, aside from metabolic changes associated with a ketogenic diet, we identified a a global elevation across all plasmanyl and plasmenyl ether lipid species, with many changes linked to clinical and biochemical markers of AD. We further validated our findings by leveraging our prior clinical studies into lipid related changeswith AD (n = 1912), and found that the lipidomic signature with MMKD was inversely associated with the lipidomic signature of prevalent and incident AD. Conclusions Intervention with a MMKD was able to alter the plasma lipidome in ways that contrast with AD-associated patterns. Given its low risk and cost, MMKD could be a promising approach for prevention or early symptomatic treatment of AD.