July 12, 2016
A new understanding of how developing brain cells come to rely on oxygen may inform the treatment of brain diseases
A new understanding of how developing brain cells come to rely on oxygen may inform the treatment of brain diseases
LA JOLLA—Our brains can survive only for a few minutes without oxygen. Salk Institute researchers have now identified the timing of a dramatic metabolic shift in developing neurons, which makes them become dependent on oxygen as a source of energy.
The findings, published July 12 in the journal eLife, reveal a metabolic route thought to go awry in cancer and neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.
“There is relatively little understanding about how neuron metabolism is first established,” says co-senior author 托尼·亨特, holder of the Renato Dulbecco Chair and American Cancer Society Professor in Salk’s Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory. “Aside from enabling us to understand this process during neuronal development, the work also allows us to better understand neurodegenerative disease.”

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To send messages along neurons is energetically demanding, and the brain uses both oxygen and glucose intensely. The brain, for example, uses 20 percent of the body’s glucose supply. The cell’s energy-producing factories, called mitochondria, are scattered throughout the long, slender axons of neurons in order to provide all parts of the cell with a constant supply of energy. As the neurons get bigger, so do the number of mitochondria, according to the new study.
We make new neurons in the womb, and this process continues after birth. Even a few areas in the adult brain continue to make new neurons throughout life. “We assume that the metabolic shift we describe in this new study happens every time a progenitor cell turns into a neuron,” says the study’s first author Xinde Zheng, a Salk research associate.
The cells that eventually become neurons initially use a pathway called glycolysis, which is a major energy-producing process that takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell and turns glucose into energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). At some point, however, the cells switch to a more efficient pathway called oxidative phosphorylation, a process that uses oxygen to produce ATP and occurs inside the mitochondria.
Hunter, Zheng, Salk’s Leah Boyer and colleagues previously studied a rare metabolic disease called Leigh syndrome and recently published work showing that less ATP is produced in afflicted neurons. In the process of understanding that disease, they needed to recreate it in a dish, using cells with mutations in the DNA contained within mitochondria. But the team realized that it was not well understood how normally dividing cells generate energy while they divide and differentiate into new cell types.
In the new study, Hunter’s team found that as a neuron precursor cell becomes a neuron, genes coding for key metabolic enzymes used in glycolysis switch off their expression,. Those changes work hand in hand to shut down glycolysis. All the while, key regulators of oxidative phosphorylation are ramping up.
Most surprising is that developing neurons must completely shut down glycolysis, says Hunter. When the researchers prevented that from happening, the neurons quickly died.

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“This is the first comprehensive analysis of metabolic changes during neuronal differentiation, and the surprising reliance of neurons on oxidative phosphorylation for their sole energy source has clear implications for neuronal vulnerability with age,” says co-senior investigator 鲁斯蒂·盖奇, a professor in Salk’s Laboratory of Genetics and holder of the Vi and John Adler Chair for Research on Age-Related Neurodegenerative Diseases.
The group plans to look more closely at how the metabolic genes are controlled in developing cells. They also plan to study neurons harboring energy defects associated with disease, such as Parkinson’s disease, and different types of neurons to compare any finer differences in metabolism.
Other authors on the study are Mingji Jin, Jerome Mertens, Yongsung Kim, Li Ma, Li Ma, and Michael Hamm, all of the Salk Institute.
该研究得到了 美国国立卫生研究院, , 那个 G.哈罗德和莱拉·Y·马瑟斯慈善基金会, , 那个 JPB基金会, , 那个 Leona M. 和 Harry B. Helmsley 慈善信托基金, Annette Merle-Smith, the 加州再生医学研究所, ,和 赫尔姆斯利基因组医学中心.
日记
eLife
作者
Xinde Zheng, Leah Boyer, Mingji Jin, Jerome Mertens, Yongsung Kim, Li Ma, Li Ma, Michael Hamm, Fred Gage, Tony Hunter
宣传办公室
电话:(858) 453-4100
press@salk.edu
萨尔克研究所是一个独立的非营利性研究机构,由首个安全有效的脊髓灰质炎疫苗的研发者乔纳斯·索尔克于1960年创立。该研究所的使命是推动以合作、敢于冒险为特点的基础性研究,以应对癌症、阿尔茨海默病和农业脆弱性等社会最紧迫的挑战。这项基础科学支撑着所有的转化研究,产生有助于全球新药和创新的见解。.