The metabolic trinity, glucose–glycogen–lactate, links astrocytes and neurons in brain energetics, signaling, memory, and gene expression

•Glucose, glycogen, and lactate are involved in diverse aspects of brain function.•Fate of surplus carbohydrate taken up into brain during exercise is unexplained.•Glucose and lactate enhance memory; glycogen is required for its consolidation.•High-dose lactate preserves memory and gene expression w...

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Published in:Neuroscience letters Vol. 637; pp. 18 - 25
Main Author: Dienel, Gerald A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Ireland Elsevier Ireland Ltd 10-01-2017
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Summary:•Glucose, glycogen, and lactate are involved in diverse aspects of brain function.•Fate of surplus carbohydrate taken up into brain during exercise is unexplained.•Glucose and lactate enhance memory; glycogen is required for its consolidation.•High-dose lactate preserves memory and gene expression without glycogenolysis.•High-dose lactate suppresses neuronal firing and is taken up mainly by astrocytes. Glucose, glycogen, and lactate are traditionally identified with brain energetics, ATP turnover, and pathophysiology. However, recent studies extend their roles to include involvement in astrocytic signaling, memory consolidation, and gene expression. Emerging roles for these brain fuels and a readily-diffusible by-product are linked to differential fluxes in glycolytic and oxidative pathways, astrocytic glycogen dynamics, redox shifts, neuron-astrocyte interactions, and regulation of astrocytic activities by noradrenaline released from the locus coeruleus. Disproportionate utilization of carbohydrate compared with oxygen during brain activation is influenced by catecholamines, but its physiological basis is not understood and its magnitude may be affected by technical aspects of metabolite assays. Memory consolidation and gene expression are impaired by glycogenolysis blockade, and prevention of these deficits by injection of abnormally-high concentrations of lactate was interpreted as a requirement for astrocyte-to-neuron lactate shuttling in memory and gene expression. However, lactate transport was not measured and evidence for presumed shuttling is not compelling. In fact, high levels of lactate used to preserve memory consolidation and induce gene expression are sufficient to shut down neuronal firing via the HCAR1 receptor. In contrast, low lactate levels activate a receptor in locus coeruleus that stimulates noradrenaline release that may activate astrocytes throughout brain. Physiological relevance of exogenous concentrations of lactate used to mimic and evaluate metabolic, molecular, and behavioral effects of lactate requires close correspondence with the normal lactate levels, the biochemical and cellular sources and sinks, and specificity of lactate delivery to target cells.
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ISSN:0304-3940
1872-7972
DOI:10.1016/j.neulet.2015.02.052