| Literature DB >> 21687795 |
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21687795 PMCID: PMC3108381 DOI: 10.3389/fnene.2011.00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroenergetics ISSN: 1662-6427
Figure 1Focal neural activity induces a characteristic biphasic NADH transient in brain tissue. This distinct physiological response (Kasischke et al., 2004) has been reported in numerous studies using brain slice preparations from mice, rats, and toad. There is general agreement that the early phase, the NADH dip, is the consequence of mitochondrial NADH oxidation due to activation of the respiratory chain and may occur predominately in neurons. In contrast, the metabolic nature and cellular localization of the late phase, the NADH overshoot, remain ambiguous. Possibilities, which are not necessarily mutually exclusive, are (i) Ca2+-dependent activation of the Krebs cycle with mitochondrial NADH production, (ii) tissue hypoxia with increase of both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial NADH, and (iii) activation of glycolysis with increase in cytoplasmic NADH. Ivanov et al. (2011) show that the biphasic NADH response is fundamentally altered when lactate or β-hydroxybutyrate replace glucose as the principal oxidative substrate.