Abstract
SummaryCalcium is an important second messenger regulating a bioenergetic response to the workloads triggered by neuronal activation. In cortical neurons using glucose as only fuel, activation by NMDA, which elicits a strong workload dependent on Na+ entry, stimulates glucose uptake, glycolysis, pyruvate and lactate production, and OXPHOS in a Ca2+-dependent way. We find that Ca2+-upregulation of glycolysis, pyruvate levels and respiration, but not glucose uptake, all depend on Aralar/AGC1/Slc25a12, the Ca2+regulated mitochondrial aspartate-glutamate carrier, component of the malate-aspartate shuttle (MAS). Ca2+-activation of MAS increases pyruvate production, which directly fuels workload-stimulated respiration. Also it stimulates glycolysis. MCU silencing had no effect indicating that none of these processes required mitochondrial Ca2+. The neuronal respiratory response to carbachol was also dependent on Aralar, but not on MCU. We also find that cortical neurons are endowed with a constitutive ER-to-mitochondria Ca2+ flow maintaining basal cell bioenergetics in which Ryanodine receptors, RyR2, rather than InsP3R, are responsible for Ca2+ release, and in which MCU does not participate. The results reveal that in neurons using glucose MCU does not participate in OXPHOS regulation under basal or stimulated conditions, while Aralar-MAS appears as the major Ca2+-dependent pathway tuning simultaneously glycolysis and OXPHOS to neuronal activation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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