Astrocytic energy demand is stimulated by K + and glutamate uptake, signaling processes, responses to neurotransmitters, Ca 2 + fluxes, and filopodial motility. Astrocytes derive energy from glycolytic and oxidative pathways, but respiration, with its high-energy yield, provides most adenosine 5 0 triphosphate (ATP). The proportion of cortical oxidative metabolism attributed to astrocytes (B30%) in in vivo nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic and autoradiographic studies corresponds to their volume fraction, indicating similar oxidation rates in astrocytes and neurons. Astrocyte-selective expression of pyruvate carboxylase (PC) enables synthesis of glutamate from glucose, accounting for two-thirds of astrocytic glucose degradation via combined pyruvate carboxylation and dehydrogenation. Together, glutamate synthesis and oxidation, including neurotransmitter turnover, generate almost as much energy as direct glucose oxidation. Glycolysis and glycogenolysis are essential for astrocytic responses to increasing energy demand because astrocytic filopodial and lamellipodial extensions, which account for 80% of their surface area, are too narrow to accommodate mitochondria; these processes depend on glycolysis, glycogenolysis, and probably diffusion of ATP and phosphocreatine formed via mitochondrial metabolism to satisfy their energy demands. High glycogen turnover in astrocytic processes may stimulate glucose demand and lactate production because less ATP is generated when glucose is metabolized via glycogen, thereby contributing to the decreased oxygen to glucose utilization ratio during brain activation. Generated lactate can spread from activated astrocytes via low-affinity monocarboxylate transporters and gap junctions, but its subsequent fate is unknown. Astrocytic metabolic compartmentation arises from their complex ultrastructure; astrocytes have high oxidative rates plus dependence on glycolysis and glycogenolysis, and their energetics is underestimated if based solely on glutamate cycling. Keywords: acetate; glucose metabolism; glutamate; neurotransmitters; potassium; pyruvate carboxylation Introduction Astrocytes are More Than HousekeepersRecent studies in many different fields have shown much more active roles of astrocytes in brain function than previously portrayed by their traditionally ascribed 'bystander or housekeeping' functions. Emerging roles of astrocytes include their interactions with the vasculature, neurons, and other astrocytes via signaling, biosynthetic, and transport processes to regulate blood flow, modulate impulse transmission, and synthesize and degrade glucose-derived neurotransmitters, for example, glutamate and g-aminobutyric acid (GABA) (Takano et al, 2006;Hertz and Zielke, 2004;Volterra and Meldolesi, 2005). All of these processes are energyrequiring or dependent on energy-related metabolic pathways, thereby directly linking astrocyte functions, energetics, and metabolite fluxes.The narrow astrocytic surface extensions (lamellae and filopodia, also called peripheral ast...
The dependence of brain function on blood glucose as a fuel does not exclude the possibility that lactate within the brain might be transferred between different cell types and serve as an energy source. It has been recently suggested that 1) about 85% of glucose consumption during brain activation is initiated by aerobic glycolysis in astrocytes, triggered by demand for glycolytically derived energy for Na+ -dependent accumulation of transmitter glutamate and its amidation to glutamine, and 2) the generated lactate is quantitatively transferred to neurons for oxidative degradation. However, astrocytic glutamate uptake can be fueled by either glycolytically or oxidatively derived energy, and the extent to which "metabolic trafficking" of lactate might occur during brain function is unknown. In this review, the potential for an astrocytic-neuronal lactate flux has been estimated by comparing rates of glucose utilization in brain and in cultured neurons and astrocytes with those for lactate release and uptake. Working brain tissue and isolated brain cells release large amounts of lactate. Cellular lactate uptake occurs by carrier-mediated facilitated diffusion and is normally limited by its dependence on metabolism of accumulated lactate to maintain a concentration gradient. The rate of this process is similar in cultured astrocytes and glutamatergic neurons, and, at physiologically occurring lactate concentrations, lactate uptake corresponds at most to 25% of the rate of glucose oxidation, which accordingly is the upper limit for "metabolic trafficking" of lactate. Because of a larger local release than uptake of lactate and the necessity for rapid lactate clearance to maintain the intracellular redox state to support lactate production in the presence of normal oxygen levels, brain activation in vivo is probably, in many cases, accompanied by a substantial overflow of glycolytically generated lactate, both to different brain areas and under some conditions (spreading depression, hyperammonemia) to circulating blood.
The activity of the pyruvate carboxylase was determined in brains of newborn and adult mice as well as primary cultures of astrocytes, of cerebral cortex neurons, and of cerebellar granule cells. The activity was found to be 0.25 +/- 0.14, 1.24 +/- 0.07, and 1.75 +/- 0.13 nmol X min -1 X mg -1 protein in, respectively, neonatal brain, adult brain, and astrocytes. Neither of the two types of neurons showed any detectable enzyme activity (i.e., less than 0.05 nmol X min -1 X mg -1). It is therefore concluded that pyruvate carboxylase is an astrocytic enzyme.
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