Literature DB >> 23359514

Increase of extracellular glutamate concentration increases its oxidation and diminishes glucose oxidation in isolated mouse hippocampus: reversible by TFB-TBOA.

Felipe Vasconcelos Torres1, Fernanda Hansen, Lucas Doridio Locks-Coelho.   

Abstract

Glutamate concentration at the synaptic level must be kept low in order to prevent excitotoxicity. Astrocytes play a key role in brain energetics, and also astrocytic glutamate transporters are responsible for the vast majority of glutamate uptake in CNS. Experiments with primary astrocytic cultures suggest that increased influx of glutamate cotransported with sodium at astrocytes favors its flux to the tricarboxylic acid cycle instead of the glutamate-glutamine cycle. Although metabolic coupling can be considered an emergent field of research with important recent discoveries, some basic aspects of glutamate metabolism still have not been characterized in brain tissue. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate whether the presence of extracellular glutamate is able to modulate the use of glutamate and glucose as energetic substrates. For this purpose, isolated hippocampi of mice were incubated with radiolabeled substrates, and CO2 radioactivity and extracellular lactate were measured. Our results point to a diminished oxidation of glucose with increasing extracellular glutamate concentration, glutamate presumably being the fuel, and might suggest that oxidation of glutamate could buffer excitotoxic conditions by high glutamate concentrations. In addition, these findings were reversed when glutamate uptake by astrocytes was impaired by the presence of (3S)-3-[[3-[[4-(trifluoromethyl)benzoyl]amino]phenyl]methoxy]-L-aspartic acid (TFB-TBOA). Taken together, our findings argue against the lactate shuttle theory, because glutamate did not cause any detectable increase in extracellular lactate content (or, presumably, in glycolysis), because the glutamate is being used as fuel instead of going to glutamine and back to neurons.
Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23359514     DOI: 10.1002/jnr.23187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci Res        ISSN: 0360-4012            Impact factor:   4.164


  4 in total

1.  Glutamate Transporters and Mitochondria: Signaling, Co-compartmentalization, Functional Coupling, and Future Directions.

Authors:  Michael B Robinson; Meredith L Lee; Sabrina DaSilva
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 3.996

Review 2.  Astroglial glutamate transporters coordinate excitatory signaling and brain energetics.

Authors:  Michael B Robinson; Joshua G Jackson
Journal:  Neurochem Int       Date:  2016-03-21       Impact factor: 3.921

3.  Perinatal Glyphosate-Based Herbicide Exposure in Rats Alters Brain Antioxidant Status, Glutamate and Acetylcholine Metabolism and Affects Recognition Memory.

Authors:  Cristina Eugenia Gallegos; Carlos Javier Baier; Mariana Bartos; Cristina Bras; Sergio Domínguez; Nina Mónaco; Fernanda Gumilar; María Sofía Giménez; Alejandra Minetti
Journal:  Neurotox Res       Date:  2018-04-02       Impact factor: 3.911

4.  The Glutamate-Glutamine (GABA) Cycle: Importance of Late Postnatal Development and Potential Reciprocal Interactions between Biosynthesis and Degradation.

Authors:  Leif Hertz
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2013-05-27       Impact factor: 5.555

  4 in total

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