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Fluid Brain Glycolysis: Limits, Speed, Location, Moonlighting, and the Fates of Glycogen and Lactate.

Luis Felipe BarrosAlejandro San MartínIván RuminotPamela Y SandovalFelipe Baeza-LehnertRobinson Arce-MolinaDaniela RauseoYasna Contreras-BaezaAlex GalazSharin Valdivia
Published in: Neurochemical research (2020)
Glycolysis is the core of intermediate metabolism, an ancient pathway discovered in the heydays of classic biochemistry. A hundred years later, it remains a matter of active research, clinical interest and is not devoid of controversy. This review examines topical aspects of glycolysis in the brain, a tissue characterized by an extreme dependence on glucose. The limits of glycolysis are reviewed in terms of flux control by glucose transporters, intercellular lactate shuttling and activity-dependent glycolysis in astrocytes and neurons. What is the site of glycogen mobilization and aerobic glycolysis in brain tissue? We scrutinize the pervasive notions that glycolysis is fast and that catalysis is channeled through supramolecular assemblies. In brain tissue, most glycolytic enzymes are catalytically silent. What then is their function?
Keyphrases
  • resting state
  • white matter
  • functional connectivity
  • cerebral ischemia
  • blood pressure
  • adipose tissue
  • brain injury
  • spinal cord injury
  • blood brain barrier
  • wound healing