Glycolytic preconditioning in astrocytes mitigates trauma-induced neurodegeneration.
Rene Solano FonsecaPatrick MetangNathan EggeYingjian LiuKielen R ZuurbierKarthigayini SivaprakasamShawn ShiraziAshleigh ChuahSonja L B ArneaudGenevieve KonopkaDong QianPeter M DouglasPublished in: eLife (2021)
Concussion is associated with a myriad of deleterious immediate and long-term consequences. Yet the molecular mechanisms and genetic targets promoting the selective vulnerability of different neural subtypes to dysfunction and degeneration remain unclear. Translating experimental models of blunt force trauma in C. elegans to concussion in mice, we identify a conserved neuroprotective mechanism in which reduction of mitochondrial electron flux through complex IV suppresses trauma-induced degeneration of the highly vulnerable dopaminergic neurons. Reducing cytochrome C oxidase function elevates mitochondrial-derived reactive oxygen species, which signal through the cytosolic hypoxia inducing transcription factor, Hif1a, to promote hyperphosphorylation and inactivation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase, PDHE1α. This critical enzyme initiates the Warburg shunt, which drives energetic reallocation from mitochondrial respiration to astrocyte-mediated glycolysis in a neuroprotective manner. These studies demonstrate a conserved process in which glycolytic preconditioning suppresses Parkinson-like hypersensitivity of dopaminergic neurons to trauma-induced degeneration via redox signaling and the Warburg effect.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- high glucose
- trauma patients
- drug induced
- endothelial cells
- cerebral ischemia
- reactive oxygen species
- spinal cord
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- signaling pathway
- pulmonary hypertension
- spinal cord injury
- skeletal muscle
- pulmonary artery
- high fat diet induced
- coronary artery
- mild traumatic brain injury
- copy number