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Glutamine synthetase deficiency in murine astrocytes results in neonatal death
Author(s) -
He Youji,
Hakvoort Theodorus B. M.,
Vermeulen Jacqueline L. M.,
Labruyère Wilhelmina T.,
De Waart D. Rudi,
Van Der Hel W. Saskia,
Ruijter Jan M.,
Uylings Harry B. M.,
Lamers Wouter H.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
glia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.954
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1098-1136
pISSN - 0894-1491
DOI - 10.1002/glia.20960
Subject(s) - glutamine , glutamine synthetase , biology , medicine , endocrinology , glutamate receptor , glutaminase , amino acid , biochemistry , receptor
Glutamine synthetase (GS) is a key enzyme in the “glutamine‐glutamate cycle” between astrocytes and neurons, but its function in vivo was thus far tested only pharmacologically. Crossing GS fl/lacZ or GS fl/fl mice with hGFAP ‐Cre mice resulted in prenatal excision of the GS fl allele in astrocytes. “GS‐KO/A” mice were born without malformations, did not suffer from seizures, had a suckling reflex, and did drink immediately after birth, but then gradually failed to feed and died on postnatal day 3. Artificial feeding relieved hypoglycemia and prolonged life, identifying starvation as the immediate cause of death. Neuronal morphology and brain energy levels did not differ from controls. Within control brains, amino acid concentrations varied in a coordinate way by postnatal day 2, implying an integrated metabolic network had developed. GS deficiency caused a 14‐fold decline in cortical glutamine and a sevenfold decline in cortical alanine concentration, but the rising glutamate levels were unaffected and glycine was twofold increased. Only these amino acids were uncoupled from the metabolic network. Cortical ammonia levels increased only 1.6‐fold, probably reflecting reduced glutaminolysis in neurons and detoxification of ammonia to glycine. These findings identify the dramatic decrease in (cortical) glutamine concentration as the primary cause of brain dysfunction in GS‐KO/A mice. The temporal dissociation between GS fl elimination and death, and the reciprocal changes in the cortical concentration of glutamine and alanine in GS‐deficient and control neonates indicate that the phenotype of GS deficiency in the brain emerges coincidentally with the neonatal activation of the glutamine‐glutamate and the associated alanine‐lactate cycles. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.