Publication | Closed Access
Metabolic substrates other than glucose support axon function in central white matter
86
Citations
27
References
2001
Year
Rat Optic NervePeripheral NervesSocial SciencesGanglion CellNeurologyNon-glucose Energy SourcesNeurochemistryMetabolic StateNeurological FunctionEnergy HomeostasisMolecular NeuroscienceBiochemistryNervous SystemAxon FunctionNeurophysiologyCellular NeurosciencePhysiologyMetabolic RegulationNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemCentral White MatterMetabolismMedicine
We tested the hypothesis that non-glucose energy sources can support axon function in the rat optic nerve. Axon function was assessed by monitoring the stimulus-evoked compound action potential (CAP). CAP was maintained at full amplitude for 2 hr in 10 mM glucose. 20 mM lactate, 20 mM pyruvate, 10 mM fructose, or 10 mM mannose supported axon function as effectively as did glucose, and 10 mM glutamine provided partial support, but beta-hydroxybutyrate, octanoate, sorbitol, alanine, aspartate, and glutamate failed to support axon function. Our results indicated that a variety of compounds can sustain function in CNS myelinated axons. Axons probably use lactate, pyruvate, and glutamine directly as energy substrates, whereas mannose and fructose could be shuttled through astrocytes to lactate, which is then exported to axons.
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