Oligodendroglial fatty acid metabolism as a central nervous system energy reserve.
Ebrahim AsadollahiAndrea TrevisiolAiman S SaabZoe J LooserPayam DibajReyhane EbrahimiKatharina KuschTorben RuhwedelWiebke MöbiusOlaf JahnJun Yup LeeAnthony Simon DonMichelle-Amirah KhalilKarsten HillerMyriam BaesBruno WeberE Dale AbelAndrea BalabioBrian PopkoCelia M KassmannHannelore EhrenreichJohannes HirrlingerKlaus-Armin NavePublished in: Nature neuroscience (2024)
Brain function requires a constant supply of glucose. However, the brain has no known energy stores, except for glycogen granules in astrocytes. In the present study, we report that continuous oligodendroglial lipid metabolism provides an energy reserve in white matter tracts. In the isolated optic nerve from young adult mice of both sexes, oligodendrocytes survive glucose deprivation better than astrocytes. Under low glucose, both axonal ATP levels and action potentials become dependent on fatty acid β-oxidation. Importantly, ongoing oligodendroglial lipid degradation feeds rapidly into white matter energy metabolism. Although not supporting high-frequency spiking, fatty acid β-oxidation in mitochondria and oligodendroglial peroxisomes protects axons from conduction blocks when glucose is limiting. Disruption of the glucose transporter GLUT1 expression in oligodendrocytes of adult mice perturbs myelin homeostasis in vivo and causes gradual demyelination without behavioral signs. This further suggests that the imbalance of myelin synthesis and degradation can underlie myelin thinning in aging and disease.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- fatty acid
- high frequency
- multiple sclerosis
- blood glucose
- optic nerve
- young adults
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- poor prognosis
- cell death
- spinal cord injury
- high fat diet induced
- resting state
- type diabetes
- optical coherence tomography
- blood pressure
- nitric oxide
- metabolic syndrome
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- adipose tissue
- functional connectivity
- cerebrospinal fluid
- cerebral ischemia
- long non coding rna
- endoplasmic reticulum
- glycemic control