Back

Neuronal ketone body utilization couples exercise and time-restricted feeding to cognitive enhancement

Salathe, S. F.; Kugler, B. A.; Franczak, E.; Davis, X. C.; Boakye, F. B.; Allen, J.; Fulghum, K. L.; Queathem, E. D.; Morris, E. M.; Puchalska, P.; Crawford, P. A.; Thyfault, J.

2026-02-27 physiology
10.64898/2026.02.25.708044 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Ketogenesis and ketone body metabolism are linked to brain health benefits, including delaying age-related cognitive decline and neurodegeneration. Exercise, particularly when combined with an overnight fast, stimulates ketogenesis and ketone body turnover as well as improves brain metabolism and cognition. Yet, whether ketone metabolism is obligatory for this response is unknown. Here, we use chronic exercise via voluntary wheel running plus time-restricted feeding (VWR+TRF, fasting from ZT10.5-18.5) to explore whether ketone bodies are a potential mediator of exercise-induced brain health benefits in middle-aged mice. To independently distinguish the roles of neuronal ketone body metabolism vs. hepatic ketone body production, we studied middle-age female neuronal-specific SCOT knockout mice and female hepatocyte-specific HMGCS2 knockout mice, respectively. VWR+TRF was compared to sedentary ad-libitum fed (SED+AL) mice to assess the impact on whole-body metabolism (indirect calorimetry), cognition (Barnes Maze and Y-Maze), and molecular adaptations in the hippocampus (proteomics). VWR+TRF robustly upregulated systemic lipid oxidation in all mice, regardless of genotype, during the first 6.5 hours of the dark period. In female SCOT-Neuron-KO mice, we show impaired responses to VWR+TRF in indices of short- and long-term memory. Proteomic analysis of isolated hippocampi revealed that SCOT-Neuron-KO mice failed to globally upregulate key facilitators of synaptic function, including leucine-rich repeated transmembrane proteins, neurexins, and neuroligins. In female HMGCS2-Liver-KO mice, impaired responses to VWR+TRF in indices of short-term memory were paired with an upregulation in ketogenesis machinery in the hippocampal proteome, suggesting potential in vivo evidence of cerebral ketogenesis, a mechanism mitigating an otherwise more pronounced behavioral phenotype. Together, these findings suggest that neuronal ketone body utilization is essential, and hepatic ketone production is contributory, to the full cognitive and synaptic adaptations to exercise plus time-restricted feeding, supporting ketone metabolism as a key mechanistic link between metabolic state and brain health in midlife.

Matching journals

The top 7 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.

1
Molecular Metabolism
105 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
18.2%
2
Aging Cell
144 papers in training set
Top 0.8%
8.2%
3
eLife
5422 papers in training set
Top 13%
6.3%
4
Nature Communications
4913 papers in training set
Top 33%
4.8%
5
Nature Metabolism
56 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
4.8%
6
GeroScience
97 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
4.2%
7
Cell Reports
1338 papers in training set
Top 14%
3.7%
50% of probability mass above
8
The FASEB Journal
175 papers in training set
Top 0.2%
3.7%
9
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
2130 papers in training set
Top 20%
3.6%
10
The Journal of Physiology
134 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
2.6%
11
Cell Metabolism
49 papers in training set
Top 0.7%
2.4%
12
Scientific Reports
3102 papers in training set
Top 51%
2.1%
13
The Journals of Gerontology, Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
22 papers in training set
Top 0.2%
1.9%
14
Frontiers in Aging
10 papers in training set
Top 0.2%
1.9%
15
Aging
69 papers in training set
Top 1%
1.8%
16
iScience
1063 papers in training set
Top 13%
1.8%
17
Nutrients
64 papers in training set
Top 1%
1.5%
18
Journal of Neuroinflammation
50 papers in training set
Top 0.5%
1.5%
19
Cell Reports Medicine
140 papers in training set
Top 6%
0.9%
20
Communications Biology
886 papers in training set
Top 17%
0.9%
21
Molecular Psychiatry
242 papers in training set
Top 3%
0.9%
22
Journal of Biological Chemistry
641 papers in training set
Top 3%
0.9%
23
Science Advances
1098 papers in training set
Top 26%
0.9%
24
Alzheimer's & Dementia
143 papers in training set
Top 3%
0.7%
25
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
32 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.7%
26
GENETICS
189 papers in training set
Top 2%
0.6%
27
BMC Biology
248 papers in training set
Top 6%
0.6%
28
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
67 papers in training set
Top 4%
0.6%
29
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
35 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.6%