Prevention of acute/severe hypoglycemia-induced neuron death by lactate administration

SJ Won, BG Jang, BH Yoo, M Sohn… - Journal of Cerebral …, 2012 - journals.sagepub.com
SJ Won, BG Jang, BH Yoo, M Sohn, MW Lee, BY Choi, JH Kim, HK Song, SW Suh
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2012journals.sagepub.com
Hypoglycemia-induced cerebral neuropathy can occur in patients with diabetes who attempt
tight control of blood glucose and may lead to cognitive dysfunction. Accumulating evidence
from animal models suggests that hypoglycemia-induced neuronal death is not a simple
result of glucose deprivation, but is instead the end result of a multifactorial process. In
particular, the excessive activation of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) consumes
cytosolic nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), resulting in energy failure. In this study …
Hypoglycemia-induced cerebral neuropathy can occur in patients with diabetes who attempt tight control of blood glucose and may lead to cognitive dysfunction. Accumulating evidence from animal models suggests that hypoglycemia-induced neuronal death is not a simple result of glucose deprivation, but is instead the end result of a multifactorial process. In particular, the excessive activation of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) consumes cytosolic nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), resulting in energy failure. In this study, we investigate whether lactate administration in the absence of cytosolic NAD+ affords neuroprotection against hypoglycemia-induced neuronal death. Intraperitoneal injection of sodium L-lactate corrected arterial blood pH and blood lactate concentration after hypoglycemia. Lactate administered without glucose was not sufficient to promote electroencephalogram recovery from an isoelectric state during hypoglycemia. However, supplementation of glucose with lactate reduced neuronal death by ∼80% in the hippocampus. Hypoglycemia-induced superoxide production and microglia activation was also substantially reduced by administration of lactate. Taken together, these results suggest an intriguing possibility: that increasing brain lactate following hypoglycemia offsets the decrease in NAD+ due to overactivation of PARP-1 by acting as an alternative energy substrate that can effectively bypass glycolysis and be fed directly to the citric acid cycle to maintain cellular ATP levels.
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