Abstract
Although all brain cells bear in principle a comparable potential in terms of energetics, in reality they exhibit different metabolic profiles. The specific biochemical characteristics explaining such disparities and their relative importance are largely unknown. Using a modeling approach, we show that modifying the kinetic parameters of pyruvate dehydrogenase and mitochondrial NADH shuttling within a realistic interval can yield a striking switch in lactate flux direction. In this context, cells having essentially an oxidative profile exhibit pronounced extracellular lactate uptake and consumption. However, they can be turned into cells with prominent aerobic glycolysis by selectively reducing the aforementioned parameters. In the case of primarily oxidative cells, we also examined the role of glycolysis and lactate transport in providing pyruvate to mitochondria in order to sustain oxidative phosphorylation. The results show that changes in lactate transport capacity and extracellular lactate concentration within the range described experimentally can sustain enhanced oxidative metabolism upon activation. Such a demonstration provides key elements to understand why certain brain cell types constitutively adopt a particular metabolic profile and how specific features can be altered under different physiological and pathological conditions in order to face evolving energy demands.
Highlights
IntroductionA central question in biology concerns the biochemical characteristics that determine the metabolic profile (glycolytic vs. oxidative) of a particular cell type
A central question in biology concerns the biochemical characteristics that determine the metabolic profile of a particular cell type
Since the experimental description of aerobic glycolysis by Warburg [1,2], this issue has become crucial to understand the process of tumorigenicity [3,4,5,6]
Summary
A central question in biology concerns the biochemical characteristics that determine the metabolic profile (glycolytic vs. oxidative) of a particular cell type. Since the experimental description of aerobic glycolysis (i.e. the conversion of glucose into lactate despite the presence of sufficient oxygen levels to carry out oxidative metabolism) by Warburg [1,2], this issue has become crucial to understand the process of tumorigenicity [3,4,5,6]. Notwithstanding, numerous studies (including those of Warburg) have documented the occurrence of aerobic glycolysis in several non-cancer cell types [7,8,9,10]. It was clearly demonstrated that astrocytes exhibit a prominent aerobic glycolytic activity [13]. Neurons seem devoid of this capacity [14] and rather present a strongly oxidative phenotype [15,16,17]
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