Brain lactate metabolism: the discoveries and the controversies

GA Dienel - Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2012 - journals.sagepub.com
GA Dienel
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2012journals.sagepub.com
Potential roles for lactate in the energetics of brain activation have changed radically during
the past three decades, shifting from waste product to supplemental fuel and signaling
molecule. Current models for lactate transport and metabolism involving cellular responses
to excitatory neurotransmission are highly debated, owing, in part, to discordant results
obtained in different experimental systems and conditions. Major conclusions drawn from
tabular data summarizing results obtained in many laboratories are as follows: Glutamate …
Potential roles for lactate in the energetics of brain activation have changed radically during the past three decades, shifting from waste product to supplemental fuel and signaling molecule. Current models for lactate transport and metabolism involving cellular responses to excitatory neurotransmission are highly debated, owing, in part, to discordant results obtained in different experimental systems and conditions. Major conclusions drawn from tabular data summarizing results obtained in many laboratories are as follows: Glutamate-stimulated glycolysis is not an inherent property of all astrocyte cultures. Synaptosomes from the adult brain and many preparations of cultured neurons have high capacities to increase glucose transport, glycolysis, and glucose-supported respiration, and pathway rates are stimulated by glutamate and compounds that enhance metabolic demand. Lactate accumulation in activated tissue is a minor fraction of glucose metabolized and does not reflect pathway fluxes. Brain activation in subjects with low plasma lactate causes outward, brain-to-blood lactate gradients, and lactate is quickly released in substantial amounts. Lactate utilization by the adult brain increases during lactate infusions and strenuous exercise that markedly increase blood lactate levels. Lactate can be an ‘opportunistic’, glucose-sparing substrate when present in high amounts, but most evidence supports glucose as the major fuel for normal, activated brain.
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