Stig W Omholt, Raissa Lejneva, Maria Jose Lagartos Donate, Domenica Caponio, Evandro Fei Fang, Asgeir Kobro-Flatmoen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In layer II of the entorhinal cortex, the principal neurons that project to the dentate gyrus and the CA3/2 hippocampal fields markedly express the large glycoprotein reelin (Re + ECLII neurons). In rodents, neurons located at the dorsal extreme of the EC, which border the rhinal fissure, express the highest levels, and the expression gradually decreases at levels successively further away from the rhinal fissure. Here, we test two predictions deducible from the hypothesis that reelin expression is strongly correlated with neuronal metabolic rate. Since the mitochondrial turnover rate serves as a proxy for energy expenditure, the mitophagy rate arguably also qualifies as such. Because messenger RNA of the canonical promitophagic BCL2 and adenovirus E1B 19-kDa-interacting protein 3 (Bnip3) is known to be highly expressed in the EC, we predicted that Bnip3 would be upregulated in Re + ECLII neurons, and that the degree of upregulation would strongly correlate with the expression level of reelin in these neurons. We confirm both predictions, supporting that the energy requirement of Re + ECLII neurons is generally high and that there is a systematic increase in metabolic rate as one moves successively closer to the rhinal fissure. Intriguingly, the systematic variation in energy requirement of the neurons that manifest the observed reelin gradient appears to be consonant with the level of spatial and temporal detail by which they encode information about the external environment.
期刊介绍:
Brain Structure & Function publishes research that provides insight into brain structure−function relationships. Studies published here integrate data spanning from molecular, cellular, developmental, and systems architecture to the neuroanatomy of behavior and cognitive functions. Manuscripts with focus on the spinal cord or the peripheral nervous system are not accepted for publication. Manuscripts with focus on diseases, animal models of diseases, or disease-related mechanisms are only considered for publication, if the findings provide novel insight into the organization and mechanisms of normal brain structure and function.