Deciphering neuron-glia compartmentalization in cortical energy metabolism.

Frontiers in neuroenergetics Pub Date : 2009-07-09 eCollection Date: 2009-01-01 DOI:10.3389/neuro.14.004.2009
Renaud Jolivet, Pierre J Magistretti, Bruno Weber
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引用次数: 83

Abstract

Energy demand is an important constraint on neural signaling. Several methods have been proposed to assess the energy budget of the brain based on a bottom-up approach in which the energy demand of individual biophysical processes are first estimated independently and then summed up to compute the brain's total energy budget. Here, we address this question using a novel approach that makes use of published datasets that reported average cerebral glucose and oxygen utilization in humans and rodents during different activation states. Our approach allows us (1) to decipher neuron-glia compartmentalization in energy metabolism and (2) to compute a precise state-dependent energy budget for the brain. Under the assumption that the fraction of energy used for signaling is proportional to the cycling of neurotransmitters, we find that in the activated state, most of the energy ( approximately 80%) is oxidatively produced and consumed by neurons to support neuron-to-neuron signaling. Glial cells, while only contributing for a small fraction to energy production ( approximately 6%), actually take up a significant fraction of glucose (50% or more) from the blood and provide neurons with glucose-derived energy substrates. Our results suggest that glycolysis occurs for a significant part in astrocytes whereas most of the oxygen is utilized in neurons. As a consequence, a transfer of glucose-derived metabolites from glial cells to neurons has to take place. Furthermore, we find that the amplitude of this transfer is correlated to (1) the activity level of the brain; the larger the activity, the more metabolites are shuttled from glia to neurons and (2) the oxidative activity in astrocytes; with higher glial pyruvate metabolism, less metabolites are shuttled from glia to neurons. While some of the details of a bottom-up biophysical approach have to be simplified, our method allows for a straightforward assessment of the brain's energy budget from macroscopic measurements with minimal underlying assumptions.

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皮质能量代谢中神经元-胶质细胞区隔的解译。
能量需求是神经信号传导的重要约束。目前已经提出了几种基于自下而上方法的评估大脑能量预算的方法,该方法首先独立估计个体生物物理过程的能量需求,然后总结计算大脑的总能量预算。在这里,我们使用一种新颖的方法来解决这个问题,该方法利用了已发表的数据集,这些数据集报告了人类和啮齿动物在不同激活状态下的平均脑葡萄糖和氧利用率。我们的方法允许我们(1)破译能量代谢中的神经元-胶质区隔;(2)计算大脑的精确状态依赖的能量预算。假设用于信号传导的能量比例与神经递质循环成正比,我们发现在激活状态下,大部分能量(约80%)由神经元氧化产生并消耗,以支持神经元间的信号传导。神经胶质细胞虽然只贡献一小部分能量(约6%),但实际上从血液中吸收了很大一部分葡萄糖(50%或更多),并为神经元提供葡萄糖衍生的能量基质。我们的研究结果表明,糖酵解在星形胶质细胞中发生,而大部分氧气在神经元中被利用。因此,葡萄糖衍生的代谢物必须从神经胶质细胞转移到神经元。此外,我们发现这种转移的幅度与(1)大脑的活动水平相关;活性越大,胶质细胞向神经元传递的代谢物越多;(2)星形胶质细胞的氧化活性越高;随着神经胶质丙酮酸代谢的增加,较少的代谢物从神经胶质转运到神经元。虽然自下而上的生物物理方法的一些细节必须被简化,但我们的方法允许从宏观测量中直接评估大脑的能量预算,并以最小的潜在假设。
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