Abstract

Glycolysis plays a key role in brain energy metabolism. The initial and rate-limiting step of brain glycolysis is catalyzed mainly by hexokinase I (HKI), the majority of which is bound to the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM), mostly through the mitochondrial inter-membrane contact sites formed by the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC, outer membrane) and the adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT, inner membrane). Earlier, we proposed a mechanism for the generation of the mitochondrial outer membrane potential (OMP) as a result of partial application of the inner membrane potential (IMP) to MOM through the electrogenic ANT-VDAC-HK inter-membrane contact sites. According to this previous mechanism, the Gibbs free energy of the hexokinase reaction might modulate the generated OMP (Lemeshko, Biophys. J., 2002). In the present work, a new computational model was developed to perform thermodynamic estimations of the proposed mechanism of IMP-HKI-mediated generation of OMP. The calculated OMP was high enough to electrically regulate MOM permeability for negatively charged metabolites through free, unbound VDACs in MOM. On the other hand, the positive-inside polarity of OMP generated by the IMP-HKI-mediated mechanism is expected to protect mitochondria against elevated concentrations of cytosolic Ca2+. This computational analysis suggests that metabolically-dependent generation of OMP in the brain mitochondria, controlled by many factors that modulate VDAC1-HKI interaction, VDAC's voltage-gating properties and permeability, might represent one of the physiological mechanisms of regulation of the brain energy metabolism and of neuronal death resistance, and might also be involved in various neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease.

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