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Glutamine as an energy substrate in cultured neurons during glucose deprivation

✍ Scribed by Liang Peng; Li Gu; Hongliang Zhang; Xueshi Huang; Elna Hertz; Leif Hertz


Book ID
102382535
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
117 KB
Volume
85
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

During glucose deprivation an increase in aspartate formation from glutamine has been observed in different brain preparations, including synaptosomes and cultured astrocytes. To what extent this reaction, which provides a substantial amount of energy, occurs in different types of neurons is unknown. The present study shows that ^14^CO~2~ formation from [U‐^14^C]glutamine in cerebellar granule neurons, a glutamatergic preparation, increased by 60% during glucose deprivation, indicating enhanced aspartate formation or increased complete oxidative degradation of glutamine. In primary cultures of cerebrocortical interneurons, a GABAergic preparation, the rate of ^14^CO~2~ production from [U‐^14^ C] glutamine was four times lower and not stimulated by glucose deprivation. During incubation with glutamine (0.8 mM) as the only metabolic substrate, cerebellar granule cells maintained an oxygen consumption rate of 12 nmol/min/mg protein, corresponding to an aspartate formation of 8 nmol/min/mg protein (three oxidations occur between glutamine and aspartate) or to a total oxidative degradation of 3 nmol/min/mg protein. During glucose deprivation, the rate of aspartate formation increased, and during a 20‐min incubation in phosphate‐buffered saline it amounted to 3.3 nmol/min/mg protein at 0.2 mM glutamine, which might have been more if measured at 0.8 mM glutamine. These values are consistent with the rate of glutamine utilization calculated based on oxygen consumption and leaves open the possibility that some glutamine is completely degraded oxidatively, as has been shown by other authors based on pyruvate recycling and labeling of lactate from aspartate in cerebellar granule neurons. Β© 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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