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AMPK Modulates the Metabolic Adaptation of C6 Glioma Cells in Glucose-Deprived Conditions without Affecting Glutamate Transport

Authors :
Inês Belo do Nascimento
Marie Verfaillie
Gamze Ates
Pauline Beckers
Virginie Joris
Nathalie Desmet
Ann Massie
Emmanuel Hermans
UCL - SSS/IONS/CEMO - Pôle Cellulaire et moléculaire
Neuro-Aging & Viro-Immunotherapy
Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences
Source :
Cells; Volume 11; Issue 11; Pages: 1800, Cells, (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2022.

Abstract

Energy homeostasis in the central nervous system largely depends on astrocytes, which provide metabolic support and protection to neurons. Astrocytes also ensure the clearance of extracellular glutamate through high-affinity transporters, which indirectly consume ATP. Considering the role of the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in the control of cell metabolism, we have examined its implication in the adaptation of astrocyte functions in response to a metabolic stress triggered by glucose deprivation. We genetically modified the astrocyte-like C6 cell line to silence AMPK activity by overexpressing a dominant negative mutant of its catalytic subunit. Upon glucose deprivation, we found that C6 cells maintain stable ATP levels and glutamate uptake capacity, highlighting their resilience during metabolic stress. In the same conditions, cells with silenced AMPK activity showed a reduction in motility, metabolic activity, and ATP levels, indicating that their adaptation to stress is compromised. The rate of ATP production remained, however, unchanged by AMPK silencing, suggesting that AMPK mostly influences energy consumption during stress conditions in these cells. Neither AMPK modulation nor prolonged glucose deprivation impaired glutamate uptake. Together, these results indicate that AMPK contributes to the adaptation of astrocyte metabolism triggered by metabolic stress, but not to the regulation of glutamate transport.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734409
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cells; Volume 11; Issue 11; Pages: 1800
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1869d575cf79abd1b5ee4fed70acd93b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11111800