Metabolic Recruitment in Brain Tissue

Barros L.F.; Ruminot, I; Sotelo-Hitschfeld, T; Lerchundi R.; Fernández-Moncada, I

Abstract

Information processing imposes urgent metabolic demands on neurons, which have negligible energy stores and restricted access to fuel. Here, we discuss metabolic recruitment, the tissue-level phenomenon whereby active neurons harvest resources from their surroundings. The primary event is the neuronal release of K+ that mirrors workload. Astrocytes sense K+ in exquisite fashion thanks to their unique coexpression of NBCe1 and α2β2 Na+/K+ ATPase, and within seconds switch to Crabtree metabolism, involving GLUT1, aerobic glycolysis, transient suppression of mitochondrial respiration, and lactate export. The lactate surge serves as a secondary recruiter by inhibiting glucose consumption in distant cells. Additional recruiters are glutamate, nitric oxide, and ammonium, which signal over different spatiotemporal domains. The net outcome of these events is that more glucose, lactate, and oxygen are made available. Metabolic recruitment works alongside neurovascular coupling and various averaging strategies to support the inordinate dynamic range of individual neurons.

Más información

Título según WOS: Metabolic Recruitment in Brain Tissue
Título según SCOPUS: Metabolic Recruitment in Brain Tissue
Título de la Revista: Annual Review of Physiology
Volumen: 85
Editorial: Annual Reviews, Inc.
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Página de inicio: 115
Página final: 135
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1146/annurev-physiol-021422-091035

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS