Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo. / Gjedde, A; Marrett, S.

In: Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, Vol. 21, No. 12, 2001, p. 1384-92.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gjedde, A & Marrett, S 2001, 'Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo.', Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, vol. 21, no. 12, pp. 1384-92. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200112000-00002

APA

Gjedde, A., & Marrett, S. (2001). Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 21(12), 1384-92. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200112000-00002

Vancouver

Gjedde A, Marrett S. Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 2001;21(12):1384-92. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200112000-00002

Author

Gjedde, A ; Marrett, S. / Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo. In: Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 2001 ; Vol. 21, No. 12. pp. 1384-92.

Bibtex

@article{39ac1e80b31511debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo.",
abstract = "The regulation of brain energy metabolism during neuronal activation is poorly understood. Specifically, the extent to which oxidative metabolism rather than glycolysis supplies the additional ATP necessary to sustain neuronal activation is in doubt. A recent hypothesis claims that astrocytes generate lactate with the muscle-type lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) isozyme LD 5. Lactate from astrocytes then undergoes oxidation in neurons after reconversion to pyruvate by the LDH subtype LD 1. On the basis of this hypothesis, the authors predicted that the time course of an excitatory increase of the oxidative metabolism of brain tissue must depend on the degree to which astrocytes provide neurons with pyruvate in the form of lactate. From the known properties of the LDH subtypes, the authors predicted two time courses for the changes of oxygen consumption in response to neuronal stimulation: one reflecting the properties of the neuronal LDH subtype LD 1, and the other reflecting the astrocytic LDH subtype LD 5. Measuring oxygen consumption (CMR O2 ) with positron emission tomography, the authors demonstrated increased CMR O2 during sustained stimulation of visual cortex with a complex stimulus. The CMR O2 increased 20.5% after 3 minutes and 27.5% after 8 minutes of stimulation, consistent with a steady-state oxygen-glucose metabolism ratio of 5.3, which is closest to the index predicted for the LD 1 subtype. The index is equal to the oxygen-glucose metabolism ratio of 5.5 calculated at baseline, indicating that pyruvate is converted to lactate in a cellular compartment with an LDH reaction closest to that of LD 1, whether at rest or during stimulation of the visual cortex with the current stimulus. The findings are consistent with a claim that neurons increase their oxidative metabolism in parallel with an increase of pyruvate, the latter generated by neuronal rather than astrocytic glycolysis.",
author = "A Gjedde and S Marrett",
year = "2001",
doi = "10.1097/00004647-200112000-00002",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "1384--92",
journal = "Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism",
issn = "0271-678X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Glycolysis in neurons, not astrocytes, delays oxidative metabolism of human visual cortex during sustained checkerboard stimulation in vivo.

AU - Gjedde, A

AU - Marrett, S

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - The regulation of brain energy metabolism during neuronal activation is poorly understood. Specifically, the extent to which oxidative metabolism rather than glycolysis supplies the additional ATP necessary to sustain neuronal activation is in doubt. A recent hypothesis claims that astrocytes generate lactate with the muscle-type lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) isozyme LD 5. Lactate from astrocytes then undergoes oxidation in neurons after reconversion to pyruvate by the LDH subtype LD 1. On the basis of this hypothesis, the authors predicted that the time course of an excitatory increase of the oxidative metabolism of brain tissue must depend on the degree to which astrocytes provide neurons with pyruvate in the form of lactate. From the known properties of the LDH subtypes, the authors predicted two time courses for the changes of oxygen consumption in response to neuronal stimulation: one reflecting the properties of the neuronal LDH subtype LD 1, and the other reflecting the astrocytic LDH subtype LD 5. Measuring oxygen consumption (CMR O2 ) with positron emission tomography, the authors demonstrated increased CMR O2 during sustained stimulation of visual cortex with a complex stimulus. The CMR O2 increased 20.5% after 3 minutes and 27.5% after 8 minutes of stimulation, consistent with a steady-state oxygen-glucose metabolism ratio of 5.3, which is closest to the index predicted for the LD 1 subtype. The index is equal to the oxygen-glucose metabolism ratio of 5.5 calculated at baseline, indicating that pyruvate is converted to lactate in a cellular compartment with an LDH reaction closest to that of LD 1, whether at rest or during stimulation of the visual cortex with the current stimulus. The findings are consistent with a claim that neurons increase their oxidative metabolism in parallel with an increase of pyruvate, the latter generated by neuronal rather than astrocytic glycolysis.

AB - The regulation of brain energy metabolism during neuronal activation is poorly understood. Specifically, the extent to which oxidative metabolism rather than glycolysis supplies the additional ATP necessary to sustain neuronal activation is in doubt. A recent hypothesis claims that astrocytes generate lactate with the muscle-type lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) isozyme LD 5. Lactate from astrocytes then undergoes oxidation in neurons after reconversion to pyruvate by the LDH subtype LD 1. On the basis of this hypothesis, the authors predicted that the time course of an excitatory increase of the oxidative metabolism of brain tissue must depend on the degree to which astrocytes provide neurons with pyruvate in the form of lactate. From the known properties of the LDH subtypes, the authors predicted two time courses for the changes of oxygen consumption in response to neuronal stimulation: one reflecting the properties of the neuronal LDH subtype LD 1, and the other reflecting the astrocytic LDH subtype LD 5. Measuring oxygen consumption (CMR O2 ) with positron emission tomography, the authors demonstrated increased CMR O2 during sustained stimulation of visual cortex with a complex stimulus. The CMR O2 increased 20.5% after 3 minutes and 27.5% after 8 minutes of stimulation, consistent with a steady-state oxygen-glucose metabolism ratio of 5.3, which is closest to the index predicted for the LD 1 subtype. The index is equal to the oxygen-glucose metabolism ratio of 5.5 calculated at baseline, indicating that pyruvate is converted to lactate in a cellular compartment with an LDH reaction closest to that of LD 1, whether at rest or during stimulation of the visual cortex with the current stimulus. The findings are consistent with a claim that neurons increase their oxidative metabolism in parallel with an increase of pyruvate, the latter generated by neuronal rather than astrocytic glycolysis.

U2 - 10.1097/00004647-200112000-00002

DO - 10.1097/00004647-200112000-00002

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 11740199

VL - 21

SP - 1384

EP - 1392

JO - Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism

JF - Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism

SN - 0271-678X

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 14946342