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Energetic substrate availability regulates synchronous activity in an excitatory neural network.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Karim, Muhammad Kaiser Abdul  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1715-0390
Echeveste, Rodrigo 
Kotter, Mark RN 
O'Neill, John S 

Abstract

Neural networks are required to meet significant metabolic demands associated with performing sophisticated computational tasks in the brain. The necessity for efficient transmission of information imposes stringent constraints on the metabolic pathways that can be used for energy generation at the synapse, and thus low availability of energetic substrates can reduce the efficacy of synaptic function. Here we study the effects of energetic substrate availability on global neural network behavior and find that glucose alone can sustain excitatory neurotransmission required to generate high-frequency synchronous bursting that emerges in culture. In contrast, obligatory oxidative energetic substrates such as lactate and pyruvate are unable to substitute for glucose, indicating that processes involving glucose metabolism form the primary energy-generating pathways supporting coordinated network activity. Our experimental results are discussed in the context of the role that metabolism plays in supporting the performance of individual synapses, including the relative contributions from postsynaptic responses, astrocytes, and presynaptic vesicle cycling. We propose a simple computational model for our excitatory cultures that accurately captures the inability of metabolically compromised synapses to sustain synchronous bursting when extracellular glucose is depleted.

Description

Keywords

Astrocytes, Cell Line, Energy Metabolism, Glucose, Human Embryonic Stem Cells, Humans, Models, Neurological, Nerve Net, Synapses, Synaptic Transmission

Journal Title

PLoS One

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1932-6203
1932-6203

Volume Title

14

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)