Diet, Alzheimer’s, and Protecting the Brain

Brent R. Stockwell, Ph.D.
4 min readFeb 19, 2023

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A recent study found that a diet that mimics fasting protects the brain of mice against Alzheimer’s Disease

There is a large body of literature on dietary modifications that have a beneficial effect on aging and aging-associated diseases, including Alzheimer’s Disease. A recent study added to this important literature by analyzing the effect of a diet that mimics fasting in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s Disease. Here is the study:

These researchers at the University of Southern California fed Alzheimer’s Disease model mice either normal mouse chow or a fasting-mimicking diet for five days two times each month beginning at 3 months of age.

Mouse considering food options
Mouse on a fasting-mimicking diet (created with Jasper.ai)

The fasting mimicking diet improved a variety of cognitive measures in the mice, reduced levels of amyloid beta and inflammatory cytokines, and increased markers of neurogenesis. In other words, a variety of positive changes were seen in the mice placed on the fasting-mimicking diet.

Smart mouse
Mouse with beneficial changes after being on a fasting-mimicking diet (created with Jasper.ai)

One of the beneficial changes seen in the mice on the fasting-mimicking diet was reduced activation of microglia, which I previously noted are associated with inflammation and neurodegeneration:

Thus, the fasting-mimicking diet was able to reduce neuroinflammation, which is associated with poor brain health.

The authors speculated that superoxide, a type of reactive oxygen species (ROS) associated with worse outcomes in Alzheimer’s Disease, might be a key factor in the effect of the fasting-mimicking diet.

They examined expression of the enzyme NOX2, which produces superoxide. They found that the fasting-mimicking diet indeed suppressed expression of NOX2. They then genetically deleted NOX2 in the Alzheimer’s model mice and found a protective effect similar to what was seen in mice who were given the fasting-mimicking diet.

Smart mouse that looks like Einstein
Mice lacking NOX2 were protected from Alzheimer’s Disease (created with Jasper.ai)

The authors then tested the feasibility of using a fasting-mimicking diet in humans. They enrolled 28 patients with mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s Disease in a study to test whether the diet would be possible in human patients. Here are the interesting details of their diet study in humans:

The placebo diet assigned to patients in the control arm consists of replacing lunch or dinner with a meal based on pasta or rice with vegetables for 5 days a month, without supplements, whereas patients in the FMD arm complete FMD cycles that last 5 days, with supplements noted for fasting-mimicking, neuroprotective, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant properties, including olive oil, coconut oil, algal oil, nuts, caffeine, and cocoa, given to patient in between FMD cycles for 25 days and while on a normal diet.”

Five of the 12 patients in the fasting-micking diet dropped out of the study after four cycles for a variety of reasons. But 5 of the 16 patients on the placebo arm also dropped out, perhaps indicating this is the expected dropout rate in a dietary study.

Thus, a fasting-like diet for 5 days each month seems to be reasonably well tolerated in humans, and was beneficial in mice, so might be an exciting new option for Alzheimer’s patients.

Elderly man
Man on a fasting-mimicking diet (created with Jasper.ai)

I should also note that my lab previous showed that NOX enzymes promote ferroptosis:

Given the protective effect of NOX2 knockout in the Alzheimer’s mice, and the fact their fasting-mimicking diet involved giving olive oil, which is high in oleic acid, an inhibitor of ferroptosis, I can’t help but wonder whether the fasting-mimicking diet is beneficial, at least in part, because it suppresses ferroptosis.

Woman considering food and the brain (created with Jasper.ai)

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Brent R. Stockwell, Ph.D.
Brent R. Stockwell, Ph.D.

Written by Brent R. Stockwell, Ph.D.

Chair and Professor of Biological Sciences at Columbia University. Top Medium writer in Science, Creativity, Health, and Ideas

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