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Intracellular compartmentation of pyruvate in primary cultures of cortical neurons as detected by 13 C NMR spectroscopy with multiple 13 C labels
Author(s) -
Cruz Fátima,
Villalba Martín,
GarcíaEspinosa María A.,
Ballesteros Paloma,
Bogónez Elena,
Satrústegui Jorgina,
Cerdán Sebastián
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of neuroscience research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.72
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1097-4547
pISSN - 0360-4012
DOI - 10.1002/jnr.10048
Subject(s) - isotopomers , pyruvic acid , intracellular , extracellular , alanine , lactic acid , biochemistry , chemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , biology , stereochemistry , amino acid , bacteria , molecule , organic chemistry , genetics
Abstract The intracellular compartmentation of pyruvate in primary cultures of cortical neurons was investigated by high resolution 13 C NMR using mixtures of different pyruvate precursors conveniently labeled with 13 C or unlabeled. Cells were incubated with 1–5 mM (1‐ 13 C, 1,2‐ 13 C 2 or U‐ 13 C 6 ) glucose only or with mixtures containing 1.5 mM (1‐ 13 C or U‐ 13 C 6 ) glucose, 0.25–2.5 mM (2‐ 13 C or 3‐ 13 C) pyruvate and 1 mM malate. Extracts from cells and incubation media were analyzed by 13 C NMR to determine the relative contributions of the different precursors to the intracellular pyruvate pool. When ( 13 C) glucose was used as the sole substrate fractional 13 C enrichments and 13 C isotopomer populations in lactate and glutamate carbons were compatible with a unique intracellular pool of pyruvate. When mixtures of ( 13 C) glucose, ( 13 C) pyruvate and malate were used, however, the fractional 13 C enrichments of the C2 and C3 carbons of lactate were higher than those of the C2 and C3 carbons of alanine and depicted a different 13 C isotopomer distribution. Moreover, neurons incubated with 1 mM (1,2‐ 13 C 2 ) glucose and 0.25–5 mM (3‐ 13 C) pyruvate produced exclusively (3‐ 13 C) lactate, revealing that extracellular pyruvate is the unique precursor of lactate under these conditions. These results reveal the presence of two different pools of intracellular pyruvate; one derived from extracellular pyruvate, used mainly for lactate and alanine production and one derived from glucose used primarily for oxidation. A red‐ox switch using the cytosolic NAD + /NADH ratio is proposed to modulate glycolytic flux, controlling which one of the two pyruvate pools is metabolized in the tricarboxylic acid cycle when substrates more oxidized or reduced than glucose are used. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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