NBCe1 Mediates the Acute Stimulation of Astrocytic Glycolysis by Extracellular K

2011 
Excitatory synaptic transmission stimulates brain tissue glycolysis. This phenomenon is the signal detected in FDG-PET imaging and, through enhanced lactate production, is also thought to contribute to the fMRI signal. Using a method based on Forster resonance energy transfer in mouse astrocytes, we have recently observed that a small rise in extracellular K + can stimulate glycolysis by >300% within seconds. The K + response was blocked by ouabain, but intracellular engagement of the Na + /K + ATPase pump with Na + was ineffective, suggesting that the canonical feedback regulatory pathway involving the Na + pump and ATP depletion is only permissive and that a second mechanism is involved. Because of their predominant K + permeability and high expression of the electrogenic Na + /HCO 3 − cotransporter NBCe1, astrocytes respond to a rise in extracellular K + with plasma membrane depolarization and intracellular alkalinization. In the present article, we show that a fast glycolytic response can be elicited independently of K + by plasma membrane depolarization or by intracellular alkalinization. The glycolytic response to K + was absent in astrocytes from NBCe1 null mice ( Slc4a4 ) and was blocked by functional or pharmacological inhibition of the NBCe1. Hippocampal neurons acquired K + -sensitive glycolysis upon heterologous NBCe1 expression. The phenomenon could also be reconstituted in HEK293 cells by coexpression of the NBCe1 and a constitutively open K + channel. We conclude that the NBCe1 is a key element in a feedforward mechanism linking excitatory synaptic transmission to fast modulation of glycolysis in astrocytes.
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