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  • Impact of caudal hindbrain glycogen metabolism on A2 noradrenergic neuron AMPK activation and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus norepinephrine activity and glucoregulatory neurotransmitter marker protein expression.

Impact of caudal hindbrain glycogen metabolism on A2 noradrenergic neuron AMPK activation and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus norepinephrine activity and glucoregulatory neurotransmitter marker protein expression.

Neuropeptides (2020-05-27)
Ayed A Alshamrani, Khaggeswar Bheemanapally, Mostafa M H Ibrahim, Karen P Briski
초록

The brain glycogen reserve is a source of oxidizable substrate fuel. Lactoprivic-sensitive hindbrain A2 noradrenergic neurons provide crucial metabolic-sensory input to downstream hypothalamic glucose-regulatory structures. Current research examined whether hindbrain glycogen fuel supply impacts A2 energy stability and governance of ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN) metabolic transmitter signaling. Male rats were injected into the caudal fourth ventricle (CV4) with the glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-D-arabinitol (DAB) prior to continuous intra-CV4 infusion of L-lactate or vehicle. Lactate reversed DAB suppression of A2 neuron AMPK protein and up-regulated phosphoAMPK profiles. A2 dopamine-β-hydroxylase expression was refractory to DAB, but elevated by DAB/lactate. Lactate normalized A2 estrogen receptor-alpha and GPER proteins and up-regulated estrogen receptor-beta levels in DAB-treated rats. VMN norepinephrine content was decreased by DAB, but partially restored by lactate. DAB caused lactate-reversible or -irreversible augmentation of VMN glycogen phosphorylase-brain (GPbb) and -muscle type (GPmm) variant profiles, and correspondingly up- or down-regulated VMN protein markers of glucose-stimulatory nitrergic and glucose-inhibitory γ-aminobutyric acid transmission. DAB did not alter plasma glucose, but suppressed or elevated circulating glucagon and corticosterone in that order. Results show that diminished hindbrain glycogen breakdown is communicated to the VMN, in part by NE signaling, to up-regulate VMN glycogen breakdown and trigger neurochemical signaling of energy imbalance in that site. DAB effects on GPmm, VMN glycogen content, and counter-regulatory hormone secretion were unabated by lactate infusion, suggesting that aside from substrate fuel provision rate, additional indicators of glycogen metabolism such as turnover rate may be monitored in the hindbrain.