Glucosensing neurons do more than just sense glucose

被引:84
作者
Levin, BE
机构
[1] Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Serv Neurol, E Orange, NJ 07018 USA
[2] Univ Med & Dent New Jersey, New Jersey Med Sch, Dept Neurosci, Newark, NJ 07103 USA
关键词
glucose responsive; glucose sensitive; neuropeptide Y; POMC; glucokinase; SUR; K-ATP;
D O I
10.1038/sj.ijo.0801916
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The brain regulates energy homeostasis by balancing energy intake, expenditure and storage. To accomplish this, it has evolved specialized neurons that receive and integrate afferent neural and metabolic signals conveying information about the energy status of the body. These sensor-integrator-effector neurons are located in brain areas involved in homeostatic functions such as the hypothalamus, locus coeruleus basal ganglia, limbic system and nucleus tractus solitarius. The ability to sense and regulate glucose metabolism is critical because of glucose's primacy as a metabolic substrate for neural function. Most neurons use glucose as an energy substrate, but glucosensing neurons also use glucose as a signaling molecule to regulate neuronal firing and transmitter release. There are two types of glucosensing neurons that either increase (glucose responsive, GR) or decrease (glucose sensitive, GS) their firing rate as brain glucose levels rise. Little is known about the mechanism by which GS neurons sense glucose. However, GR neurons appear to function much like the pancreatic beta-cell where glycolysis regulates the activity of an ATP-sensitive K+ (K-ATP) channel. The K-ATP channel is composed of four pore-forming units (Kir6.2) and four sulfonylurea binding sites (SUR). Glucokinase (GK) appears to modulate K-ATP channel activity via its gatekeeper role in the glycolytic production of ATP. Thus, GK may serve as a marker for GR neurons. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus are critical components of the energy homeostasis pathways in the brain. Both express Kir6.2 and GK, as well as leptin receptors. They also receive visceral neural and intrinsic neuropeptide and transmitter inputs. Such metabolism-related signals can summate upon K-ATP channel activity which then alters membrane potential, neuronal firing rate and peptide/transmitter release. The outputs of these neurons are integral components of effector systems which regulate energy homeostasis. Thus, arcuate NPY and POMC neurons are probably prototypes of this important class of sensor-integrator-effector neurons.
引用
收藏
页码:S68 / S72
页数:5
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   Toward understanding the assembly and structure of KATP channels [J].
Aguilar-Bryan, L ;
Clement, JP ;
Gonzalez, G ;
Kunjilwar, K ;
Babenko, A ;
Bryan, J .
PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1998, 78 (01) :227-245
[2]   GLUCOSE, SULFONYLUREAS, AND NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASE - ROLE OF ATP-SENSITIVE K+ CHANNELS [J].
AMOROSO, S ;
SCHMIDANTOMARCHI, H ;
FOSSET, M ;
LAZDUNSKI, M .
SCIENCE, 1990, 247 (4944) :852-854
[3]   GLUCOSE-INDUCED EXCITATION OF HYPOTHALAMIC NEURONS IS MEDIATED BY ATP-SENSITIVE K+ CHANNELS [J].
ASHFORD, MLJ ;
BODEN, PR ;
TREHERNE, JM .
PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1990, 415 (04) :479-483
[4]   KATP channels:: Linker between phospholipid metabolism and excitability [J].
Baukrowitz, T ;
Fakler, B .
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2000, 60 (06) :735-740
[5]   Local ventromedial hypothalamus glucose perfusion blocks counterregulation during systemic hypoglycemia in awake rats [J].
Borg, MA ;
Sherwin, RS ;
Borg, WP ;
Tamborlane, WV ;
Shulman, GI .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1997, 99 (02) :361-365
[6]   LOCAL VENTROMEDIAL HYPOTHALAMUS GLUCOPENIA TRIGGERS COUNTERREGULATORY HORMONE-RELEASE [J].
BORG, WP ;
SHERWIN, RS ;
DURING, MJ ;
BORG, MA ;
SHULMAN, GI .
DIABETES, 1995, 44 (02) :180-184
[7]   FUNCTIONAL COUPLING BETWEEN TRANSIENT DECLINES IN BLOOD-GLUCOSE AND FEEDING-BEHAVIOR - TEMPORAL RELATIONSHIPS [J].
CAMPFIELD, LA ;
SMITH, FJ .
BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN, 1986, 17 (03) :427-433
[8]   Distribution and phenotype of neurons containing the ATP-sensitive K+ channel in rat brain [J].
Dunn-Meynell, AA ;
Rawson, NE ;
Levin, BE .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1998, 814 (1-2) :41-54
[9]   Low-affinity sulfonylurea binding sites reside on neuronal cell bodies in the brain [J].
DunnMeynell, AA ;
Routh, VH ;
McArdle, JJ ;
Levin, BE .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1997, 745 (1-2) :1-9
[10]   Essential role of phosphoinositide 3-kinase in leptin-induced KATP channel activation in the rat CRI-G1 insulinoma cell line [J].
Harvey, J ;
McKay, NG ;
Walker, KS ;
Van der Kaay, J ;
Downes, CP ;
Ashford, MLJ .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2000, 275 (07) :4660-4669