Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition

Glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) is the main transporter mediating glucose access from the blood to the brain. In fact, homozygous ablation of GLUT1 selectively in brain vascular endothelial cells is ultimately incompatible with life, and its heterozygous ablation in these cells prompts a severe breakd...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: García-Ardanaz, C. (Carlos), Solas, M. (Maite), Ramirez, M.J. (María Javier)
Format: info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
Language:eng
Published: Universidad de Navarra 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10171/65104
_version_ 1793400492396642304
author García-Ardanaz, C. (Carlos)
Solas, M. (Maite)
Ramirez, M.J. (María Javier)
author_facet García-Ardanaz, C. (Carlos)
Solas, M. (Maite)
Ramirez, M.J. (María Javier)
author_sort García-Ardanaz, C. (Carlos)
collection DSpace
description Glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) is the main transporter mediating glucose access from the blood to the brain. In fact, homozygous ablation of GLUT1 selectively in brain vascular endothelial cells is ultimately incompatible with life, and its heterozygous ablation in these cells prompts a severe breakdown of both brain glucose metabolism and cognitive abilities. Astrocytes keep an intimate connection with both brain blood vessels and synaptic terminals, and are considered an essential source of blood-borne glucose or its metabolites to neurons. Nonetheless, the necessity of the main astrocyte glucose transporter, i.e. GLUT1, for brain glucose metabolism has not been defined. Unexpectedly, we found that brain glucose utilization was paradoxically augmented in mice featuring astrocyte-specific GLUT1 ablation (GLUT1GFAP mice). These mice also exhibited improved systemic glucose metabolism with increased glucose tolerance and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, as well as upgraded brown adipose tissue activity. Obese GLUT1GFAP animals especially benefited from these phenotypic features, which resulted in rendering them metabolically healthier than obese control animals. Noteworthy, GLUT1GFAP mice did not present alterations regarding spatial memory performance, and even slightly outperformed control mice regarding recognition memory capacities. Mechanistically, we observed that GLUT1-ablated astrocytes exhibited increased insulin receptor-dependent ATP release, and that both astrocyte-specific insulin signaling and brain purinergic signaling are essential for the improved systemic glucose homeostasis and cognitive maintenance shown by GLUT1GFAP mice. Furthermore, it is known that Alzheimer s disease (AD) patients feature decreased GLUT1 levels, and that GLUT1 ablation in brain vascular endothelial cells accelerates the progression of an AD-like pathology in an AD mouse model. Moved by the above-mentioned findings, we induced astrocyte-specific GLUT1 ablation in the AD mouse model APP/PS1 (APP/PS1-GLUT1GFAP mice). Strikingly, we found that APP/PS1-GLUT1GFAP mice showed a decreased mortality rate, as well as markedly improved cognitive performance, in comparison to APP/PS1 mice. Importantly, chemogenetic perturbation of astrocytic Ca2+ activity totally abrogated the cognitive improvement elicited by astrocytic GLUT1 ablation. Collectively, we demonstrate that astrocytic GLUT1 is central to the regulation of brain energetics, yet its ablation triggers a reprogramming of brain metabolism sufficient to sustain brain energy requirements, systemic glucose homeostasis and cognitive function.
format info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
id oai:dadun.unav.edu:10171-65104
institution Universidad de Navarra
language eng
publishDate 2023
publisher Universidad de Navarra
record_format dspace
spelling oai:dadun.unav.edu:10171-651042023-05-03T07:54:47Z Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition García-Ardanaz, C. (Carlos) Solas, M. (Maite) Ramirez, M.J. (María Javier) Materias Investigacion::Farmacia::Farmacia y farmacología GLUT1 Astrocytic GLUT1 ablation Glucose homeostasis Cognition Brain Energy substrates Astrocytes Genetic mouse models Glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) is the main transporter mediating glucose access from the blood to the brain. In fact, homozygous ablation of GLUT1 selectively in brain vascular endothelial cells is ultimately incompatible with life, and its heterozygous ablation in these cells prompts a severe breakdown of both brain glucose metabolism and cognitive abilities. Astrocytes keep an intimate connection with both brain blood vessels and synaptic terminals, and are considered an essential source of blood-borne glucose or its metabolites to neurons. Nonetheless, the necessity of the main astrocyte glucose transporter, i.e. GLUT1, for brain glucose metabolism has not been defined. Unexpectedly, we found that brain glucose utilization was paradoxically augmented in mice featuring astrocyte-specific GLUT1 ablation (GLUT1GFAP mice). These mice also exhibited improved systemic glucose metabolism with increased glucose tolerance and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, as well as upgraded brown adipose tissue activity. Obese GLUT1GFAP animals especially benefited from these phenotypic features, which resulted in rendering them metabolically healthier than obese control animals. Noteworthy, GLUT1GFAP mice did not present alterations regarding spatial memory performance, and even slightly outperformed control mice regarding recognition memory capacities. Mechanistically, we observed that GLUT1-ablated astrocytes exhibited increased insulin receptor-dependent ATP release, and that both astrocyte-specific insulin signaling and brain purinergic signaling are essential for the improved systemic glucose homeostasis and cognitive maintenance shown by GLUT1GFAP mice. Furthermore, it is known that Alzheimer s disease (AD) patients feature decreased GLUT1 levels, and that GLUT1 ablation in brain vascular endothelial cells accelerates the progression of an AD-like pathology in an AD mouse model. Moved by the above-mentioned findings, we induced astrocyte-specific GLUT1 ablation in the AD mouse model APP/PS1 (APP/PS1-GLUT1GFAP mice). Strikingly, we found that APP/PS1-GLUT1GFAP mice showed a decreased mortality rate, as well as markedly improved cognitive performance, in comparison to APP/PS1 mice. Importantly, chemogenetic perturbation of astrocytic Ca2+ activity totally abrogated the cognitive improvement elicited by astrocytic GLUT1 ablation. Collectively, we demonstrate that astrocytic GLUT1 is central to the regulation of brain energetics, yet its ablation triggers a reprogramming of brain metabolism sufficient to sustain brain energy requirements, systemic glucose homeostasis and cognitive function. 2023-01-24T08:59:54Z 2023-01-24T08:59:54Z 2022-01-24 2022-12-16 info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis https://hdl.handle.net/10171/65104 eng info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess application/pdf Universidad de Navarra
spellingShingle Materias Investigacion::Farmacia::Farmacia y farmacología
GLUT1
Astrocytic GLUT1 ablation
Glucose homeostasis
Cognition
Brain
Energy substrates
Astrocytes
Genetic mouse models
García-Ardanaz, C. (Carlos)
Solas, M. (Maite)
Ramirez, M.J. (María Javier)
Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
title Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
title_full Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
title_fullStr Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
title_full_unstemmed Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
title_short Impact of astrocytic GLUT1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
title_sort impact of astrocytic glut1 ablation on glucose homeostasis and cognition
topic Materias Investigacion::Farmacia::Farmacia y farmacología
GLUT1
Astrocytic GLUT1 ablation
Glucose homeostasis
Cognition
Brain
Energy substrates
Astrocytes
Genetic mouse models
url https://hdl.handle.net/10171/65104
work_keys_str_mv AT garciaardanazccarlos impactofastrocyticglut1ablationonglucosehomeostasisandcognition
AT solasmmaite impactofastrocyticglut1ablationonglucosehomeostasisandcognition
AT ramirezmjmariajavier impactofastrocyticglut1ablationonglucosehomeostasisandcognition