Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2040835 Cell Reports 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Glutamate is an energy substrate through GDH activity in the brain•Central GDH deficit increases hypothalamic ADP/ATP ratios and activates AMPK•Lack of glutamate utilization is compensated by increased brain glucose usage•Lack of central glutamate consumption reshapes energy stores in periphery

SummaryGlucose, the main energy substrate used in the CNS, is continuously supplied by the periphery. Glutamate, the major excitatory neurotransmitter, is foreseen as a complementary energy contributor in the brain. In particular, astrocytes actively take up glutamate and may use it through oxidative glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activity. Here, we investigated the significance of glutamate as energy substrate for the brain. Upon glutamate exposure, astrocytes generated ATP in a GDH-dependent way. The observed lack of glutamate oxidation in brain-specific GDH null CnsGlud1−/− mice resulted in a central energy-deprivation state with increased ADP/ATP ratios and phospho-AMPK in the hypothalamus. This induced changes in the autonomous nervous system balance, with increased sympathetic activity promoting hepatic glucose production and mobilization of substrates reshaping peripheral energy stores. Our data reveal the importance of glutamate as necessary energy substrate for the brain and the role of central GDH in the regulation of whole-body energy homeostasis.

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