Glucokinase Is the Likely Mediator of Glucosensing in Both Glucose-Excited and Glucose-Inhibited Central Neurons

  1. Ambrose A. Dunn-Meynell12,
  2. Vanessa H. Routh3,
  3. Ling Kang2,
  4. Larry Gaspers3 and
  5. Barry E. Levin12
  1. 1Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, East Orange, New Jersey
  2. 2Department of Neurosciences, New Jersey Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey
  3. 3Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, New Jersey Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey

    Abstract

    Specialized neurons utilize glucose as a signaling molecule to alter their firing rate. Glucose-excited (GE) neurons increase and glucose-inhibited (GI) neurons reduce activity as ambient glucose levels rise. Glucose-induced changes in the ATP-to-ADP ratio in GE neurons modulate the activity of the ATP-sensitive K+ channel, which determines the rate of cell firing. The GI glucosensing mechanism is unknown. We postulated that glucokinase (GK), a high–Michaelis constant (Km) hexokinase expressed in brain areas containing populations of GE and GI neurons, is the controlling step in glucosensing. Double-label in situ hybridization demonstrated neuron-specific GK mRNA expression in locus ceruleus norepinephrine and in hypothalamic neuropeptide Y, pro-opiomelanocortin, and γ-aminobutyric acid neurons, but it did not demonstrate this expression in orexin neurons. GK mRNA was also found in the area postrema/nucleus tractus solitarius region by RT-PCR. Intracarotid glucose infusions stimulated c-fos expression in the same areas that expressed GK. At 2.5 mmol/l glucose, fura-2 Ca2+ imaging of dissociated ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus neurons demonstrated GE neurons whose intracellular Ca2+ oscillations were inhibited and GI neurons whose Ca2+ oscillations were stimulated by four selective GK inhibitors. Finally, GK expression was increased in rats with impaired central glucosensing (posthypoglycemia and diet-induced obesity) but was unaffected by a 48-h fast. These data suggest a critical role for GK as a regulator of glucosensing in both GE and GI neurons in the brain.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Barry E. Levin, MD, Neurology Service (127C), VA Medical Center, 385 Tremont Ave., East Orange, NJ 07018-1095. E-mail: levin{at}umdnj.edu.

      Received for publication 14 March 2002 and accepted in revised form 18 April 2002.

      ARC, arcuate nucleus; [Ca2+]i, intracellular Ca2+; DIO, diet-induced obesity; DR, diet resistance; GE, glucose-excited; GFAP, glial fibrillary acidic protein; GI, glucose-inhibited; GK, glucokinase; HBSS, Hanks’ balanced salt solution; IC50, half-maximal inhibitory concentration; KATP channel, ATP-sensitive K+ channel; NG, nonglucosensing; NPY, neuropeptide Y; NTS, nucleus tractus solitarius; POMC, pro-opiomelanocortin; VMN, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus.

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