Caudal hindbrain "sensing" of glucoprivation activates central neural mechanisms that enhance systemic glucose availability, but the critical molecular variable(s) linked to detection of local metabolic insufficiency remains unclear. Central neurons and glia are metabolically coupled via intercellular trafficking of the glycolytic product lactate as a substrate for neuronal oxidative respiration. Using complementary in vivo models for experimental manipulation of lactate availability within the caudal hindbrain, we investigated the hypothesis that lactate insufficiency may be monitored by local metabolically "sensitive" neurons as an indicator of central nervous system energy imbalance. The data show that caudal fourth ventricular (CV4) administration of the monocarboxylate transporter inhibitor alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate (4CIN) resulted in dose-dependent increases in blood glucose in euglycemic animals, whereas the degree and duration of hypoglycemia elicited by insulin administration were exacerbated by exogenous L-lactate delivery to the CV4. Immunocytochemical processing of the hindbrain for the inducible c-fos gene product Fos revealed that 4CIN enhanced Fos immunoreactivity in the dorsal vagal complex (DVC), e.g., the nucleus of the solitary tract and dorsal vagal motor nucleus, and adjacent area postrema, sites where cells characterized by unique sensitivity to diminished glucose and/or glycolytic intermediate/end product levels reside, and in the medial vestibular nucleus (MV), and that CV4 L-lactate infusion increased Fos labeling within the DVC and MV after insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Together, these results support the view that lactate is a critical monitored metabolic variable in caudal hindbrain detection of energy imbalance resulting from glucoprivation and that diminished uptake and/or oxidative catabolism of this fuel activates neural mechanisms that increase systemic glucose availability.
Evidence that intracerebral lactate administration alters electrophysiological sensitivity of metabolic-signaling neurons and hypoglycemic counterregulation suggests that this substrate fuel is a monitored indicator of in central nervous system energy balance. Catecholaminergic (CA) neurons in the caudal hindbrain nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS)/area postrema (AP) complex participate in the origin and/or relay of stimuli that signal deficient glucose provision to the brain. The present studies evaluated the responsiveness of this neurochemical phenotype to lactate insufficiency by investigating the effects of pharmacological inhibition of local monocarboxylate transporter activity on the transcriptional status of these cells. Adult female rats were sacrificed by transcardial perfusion 2 h after infusion of graded doses of the monocarboxylate transporter inhibitor, α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (4-CIN), or vehicle into the caudal fourth ventricle, and tissue sections through the NTS/AP were processed by dual-label immunofluorescence histochemistry for demonstration of cytoplasmic tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and the inducible nuclear AP-1 regulatory factor, Fos. While vehicle administration resulted in negligible Fos immunostaining within the NTS, 4-CIN-treated animals exhibited dose-dependent increases in mean numbers of Fos-ir- and TH-/Fos-ir-positive neurons in this structure. These data show that pharmacological suppression of lactate trafficking in the caudal hindbrain elicits the genomic activation of NTS/AP CA neurons. In light of evidence implicating this neurochemical phenotype in signaling of cellular energy imbalance, the current results support the view that diminished uptake and/or catabolism of lactate may underlie CA neuronal activation of neural pathways governing compensatory behavioral and physiological responses to metabolic substrate deficiency.
Astrocytic provision of lactate provision to neurons may be a critical indicator of substrate fuel availability in metabolic sensing sites in the brain, including the hindbrain dorsal vagal complex. We examined the hypothesis that vagal complex monocarboxylate transporter protein levels are gender dependent and estrogen dependent, and that estrogen influences adaptation of these protein responses during repeated insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Western blot analyses showed that male and estrogen-treated ovariectomized female rats exhibit opposite changes in monocarboxylate transporter-2 levels after one insulin injection, as well as divergent patterns of adaptation to this metabolic challenge. The data suggest that sex differences in hypoglycemic patterns in vagal complex lactate transport may underlie disparate signaling of cellular energy imbalance.
Caudal fourth ventricular (CV4) infusion of the monocarboxylate transporter inhibitor, α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (4CIN), causes hyperglycemia coincident with Fos expression in the hindbrain nucleus tractus solitarius, a rare central source of metabolic deficit signaling. The present studies examined the hypothesis that hindbrain lactoprivic signaling activates central autonomic pathways that regulate systemic glucostasis by examining the effects of this drug treatment paradigm on patterns of Fos expression in forebrain structures that integrate sensory input from metabolic sensors and coordinate motor responses to energy shortages. Two hours after CV4 infusion of graded doses of 4CIN or vehicle alone, adult female rats were sacrificed by transcardial perfusion and sections through the telencephalic and diencephalic metabolic loci were processed for Fos immunoreactivity (-ir). Fos labeling of the hypothalamic paraventricular (PVH), dorsomedial (DMH), and ventromedial (VMH) nuclei was significantly elevated, relative to the vehicle-treated controls, in response to the lowest dose of 4CIN, e.g. 10 µg/animal. Treatment with higher doses of 4CIN (25 or 50 µg) further augmented numbers of Fos-ir-positive neurons in these structures, and also elicited staining of the bed nuclei of the stria terminalis (BST), medial preoptic (MPN), arcuate (ARH), supraoptic (SO), and anterior hypothalamic nuclei (AHN), and lateral hypothalamic area (LHA). Mean numbers of Fos-immunolabeled neurons in the ARH, DMH, LHA, AHN, MPN, and SO were not different between animals infused with 25 versus 50 µg 4CIN, whereas neuronal labeling in the VMH, BST, and PVH was significantly greater in the high- versus the middle-dose groups. The present data show that pharmacological inhibition of lactate uptake within the caudal hindbrain results in dose-dependent neuronal Fos immunoexpression within characterized forebrain components of the central metabolic circuitry, and that these patterns of neuronal transcriptional activation parallel observed drug effects on blood glucose levels. These results suggest that lactoprivic signaling by metabolic ‘sensing’ neurons in the caudal hindbrain initiates central neural mechanisms that control systemic energy availability, and that local lactate-‘sensitive’ neurons are connected neuroanatomically with principal higher-order autonomic metabolic loci that regulate glucostasis.
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