A lactate-dependent shift of glycolysis mediates synaptic and cognitive processes in male mice.
Ignacio Fernández-MoncadaGianluca LavancoUnai B FundazuriNasrin BollmohrSarah MountademTommaso Dalla TorPauline HachaguerFrancisca Julio-KalajzicDoriane GisquetRomán SerratLuigi BellocchioAstrid CannichBérénice Fortunato-MarsolYusuke NasuRobert E CampbellFilippo DragoCarla CannizzaroGuillaume FerreiraAnne-Karine Bouzier-SoreLuc PellerinJuan Pedro BolañosGilles BonventoLuis Felipe BarrosStephane H R OlietAude PanatierGiovanni MarsicanoPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Astrocytes control brain activity via both metabolic processes and gliotransmission, but the physiological links between these functions are scantly known. Here we show that endogenous activation of astrocyte type-1 cannabinoid (CB1) receptors determines a shift of glycolysis towards the lactate-dependent production of D-serine, thereby gating synaptic and cognitive functions in male mice. Mutant mice lacking the CB1 receptor gene in astrocytes (GFAP-CB1-KO) are impaired in novel object recognition (NOR) memory. This phenotype is rescued by the gliotransmitter D-serine, by its precursor L-serine, and also by lactate and 3,5-DHBA, an agonist of the lactate receptor HCAR1. Such lactate-dependent effect is abolished when the astrocyte-specific phosphorylated-pathway (PP), which diverts glycolysis towards L-serine synthesis, is blocked. Consistently, lactate and 3,5-DHBA promoted the co-agonist binding site occupancy of CA1 post-synaptic NMDA receptors in hippocampal slices in a PP-dependent manner. Thus, a tight cross-talk between astrocytic energy metabolism and gliotransmission determines synaptic and cognitive processes.