Health & Fitness

Short-term fasting induces profound neuronal autophagy.

Kristen Sparrow • August 07, 2018

statue of Kuan Yin
Ancient Medicine Made Modern

This is an older study done in mice which shows that 24 hours of fasting produces upregulation of autophagy (cellular debris removal) in the brain.  48 hours produces even more.  I’m not sure how many hours of fasting that would translate to for humans.  Interesting!  Though I have a tough time fasting for 16 hours, so not sure if I would look forward to a 24 hour… Zach Haigney does a nice take down here. Full article here

2010 Aug;6(6):702-10. Epub 2010 Aug 14.

Short-term fasting induces profound neuronal autophagy.

Author information

1
Department of Immunology and Microbial Science, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, USA.

Abstract

Disruption of autophagy–a key homeostatic process in which cytosolic components are degraded and recycled through lysosomes–can cause neurodegeneration in tissue culture and in vivo. Upregulation of this pathway may be neuroprotective, and much effort is being invested in developing drugs that cross the blood brain barrier and increase neuronal autophagy. One well-recognized way of inducing autophagy is by food restriction, which upregulates autophagy in many organs including the liver; but current dogma holds that the brain escapes this effect, perhaps because it is a metabolically privileged site. Here, we have re-evaluated this tenet using a novel approach that allows us to detect, enumerate and characterize autophagosomes in vivo. We first validate the approach by showing that it allows the identification and characterization of autophagosomes in the livers of food-restricted mice. We use the method to identify constitutive autophagosomes in cortical neurons and Purkinje cells, and we show that short-term fasting leads to a dramatic upregulation in neuronal autophagy. The increased neuronal autophagy is revealed by changes in autophagosome abundance and characteristics, and by diminished neuronal mTOR activity in vivo, demonstrated by a reduction in levels of phosphorylated S6 ribosomal protein in Purkinje cells. The increased abundance of autophagosomes in Purkinje cells was confirmed using transmission electron microscopy. Our data lead us to speculate that sporadic fasting might represent a simple, safe and inexpensive means to promote this potentially therapeutic neuronal response.