| Literature DB >> 30668149 |
Chih-Wei Wu1, Chun-Ying Hung1, Hajime Hirase2,3,4, You-Lin Tain1,5, Wei-Chia Lee6, Julie Y H Chan1, Mu-Hui Fu7, Lee-Wei Chen8, Wen-Chung Liu8, Chih-Kuang Liang9, Ying-Hao Ho9, Yu Chih Kung10,11, Steve Leu1, Kay L H Wu1,12.
Abstract
Excessive maternal high-fructose diet (HFD) during pregnancy and lactation has been reported to cause metabolic disorders in the offspring. Whether the infant's brain metabolism is disturbed by maternal HFD is largely unknown. Brain energy metabolism is elevated dramatically during fetal and postnatal development, whereby maternal nutrition is a key factor that determines cellular metabolism. Astrocytes, a nonneuronal cell type in the brain, are considered to support the high-energy demands of neurons by supplying lactate. In this study, the effects of maternal HFD on astrocytic glucose metabolism were investigated using hippocampal primary cultures of female infants. We found that glycolytic capacity and mitochondrial respiration and electron transport chain were suppressed by maternal HFD. Mitochondrial DNA copy number and mitochondrial transcription factor A expression were suppressed by maternal HFD. Western blots and immunofluorescent images further indicated that the glucose transporter 1 was downregulated whereas the insulin receptor-α, phospho-insulin receptor substrate-1 (Y612) and the p85 subunit of phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase were upregulated in the HFD group. Pioglitazone, which is known to increase astrocytic glucose metabolism, effectively reversed the suppressed glycolysis, and lactate release was restored. Moreover, pioglitazone also normalized oxidative phosphorylation with an increase of cytosolic ATP. Together, these results suggest that maternal HFD impairs astrocytic energy metabolic pathways that were reversed by pioglitazone.Entities:
Keywords: astrocytic glucose insulin signaling; glucose transporter 1; maternal high-fructose diet; metabolism; pioglitazone
Year: 2019 PMID: 30668149 DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00408.2018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 0193-1849 Impact factor: 4.310