BIOLOGICAL AN D EN VIRON MEN TAL SCIEN CE AN D EN GIN EER IN G DIVIS IO N
formed from glucose by non-neuronal cells called astrocytes, but its role in the organ is still poorly understood. The new study reveals an unexpected role for lactate as a modulator of neuronal function and may also help to explain the beneficial effects of physical exercise on the brain.
“We have found more than 50 genes induced by lactate — it’s a Pandora’s box we have opened!” Pierre Magistretti from the Biological and Environmental Science and Engineering Division and his colleagues isolated neurons from mouse neocortex and grew the cells in Petri dishes. They then added lactate to
the cultures and found that it induced expression of c-FOS, an “immediateearly” gene that is switched on as soon as neurons become active. It also induced expression of Arc and Zif268, which are early genes that turn on a neuronal plasticity program. Expression levels of these genes and the concentration of their corresponding proteins increased 3 – 5.5-fold, peaking one hour after lactate was added to the cells. Lactate also induced expression of the BDNF gene, which encodes a growth factor involved in later stages of neuronal plasticity. This gene reached its maximum levels about four hours after lactate treatment. Experiments revealed that lactate exerts these effects by activating the NMDA receptor, which plays a key role in long-term potentiation (LTP), a form of synaptic plasticity underlying learning and memory. In 2011, Magistretti and collaborators demonstrated that formation of long-term memories depends upon lactate released from astrocytes 2, and this new study extends this knowledge by identifying the underlying molecular mechanism. “We are now carrying out a transcriptome analysis of all genes induced by lactate,” says Magistretti. “We have found more than 50 — it’s a Pandora’s box we have opened!” Numerous other studies performed in both animals and humans over the past decade show that physical exercise can enhance brain functions such as memory, but how this happens is still unclear. These new findings provide a direct link between physical exercise and brain function. In the future, Magistretti and his colleagues plan to further expand on this link. 1. Yang, J., Ruchti, E., Petit, J.–M., Jourdain, P., Grenningloh, G. et al. Lactate promotes plasticity gene expression by potentiating NMDA signaling in neurons. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111, 12228 (2014). 2. Suzuki, A., Stern, S.A., Bozdagi, O., Walker, G.W., Huntley, R.W. et al. Astrocyte-neuron lactate transport is required for long-term memory formation. Cell 144, 810-23 (2011).
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