Chronic social stress disrupts the intracellular redistribution of brain hexokinase 3 induced by shifts in peripheral glucose levels

Author:

van der Kooij Michael A.,Rojas-Charry Liliana,Givehchi Maryam,Wolf Christina,Bueno Diones,Arndt Sabine,Tenzer Stefan,Mattioni Lorenzo,Treccani Giulia,Hasch Annika,Schmeisser Michael J.,Vianello Caterina,Giacomello Marta,Methner AxelORCID

Abstract

Abstract Chronic stress has the potential to impair health and may increase the vulnerability for psychiatric disorders. Emerging evidence suggests that specific neurometabolic dysfunctions play a role herein. In mice, chronic social defeat (CSD) stress reduces cerebral glucose uptake despite hyperglycemia. We hypothesized that this metabolic decoupling would be reflected by changes in contact sites between mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum, important intracellular nutrient sensors, and signaling hubs. We thus analyzed the proteome of their biochemical counterparts, mitochondria-associated membranes (MAMs) from whole brain tissue obtained from CSD and control mice. This revealed a lack of the glucose-metabolizing enzyme hexokinase 3 (HK3) in MAMs from CSD mice. In controls, HK3 protein abundance in MAMs and also in striatal synaptosomes correlated positively with peripheral blood glucose levels, but this connection was lost in CSD. We conclude that the ability of HK3 to traffic to sites of need, such as MAMs or synapses, is abolished upon CSD and surmise that this contributes to a cellular dysfunction instigated by chronic stress. Key messages Chronic social defeat (CSD) alters brain glucose metabolism CSD depletes hexokinase 3 (HK3) from mitochondria-associated membranes (MAMs) CSD results in loss of positive correlation between blood glucose and HK3 in MAMs and synaptosomes

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Universitätsmedizin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Drug Discovery,Molecular Medicine

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