Brain energy metabolism is optimized to minimize the cost of enzyme synthesis and transport
Journal article, 2024

The energy metabolism of the brain is poorly understood partly due to the complex morphology of neurons and fluctuations in ATP demand over time. To investigate this, we used metabolic models that estimate enzyme usage per pathway, enzyme utilization over time, and enzyme transportation to evaluate how these parameters and processes affect ATP costs for enzyme synthesis and transportation. Our models show that the total enzyme maintenance energy expenditure of the human body depends on how glycolysis and mitochondrial respiration are distributed both across and within cell types in the brain. We suggest that brain metabolism is optimized to minimize the ATP maintenance cost by distributing the different ATP generation pathways in an advantageous way across cell types and potentially also across synapses within the same cell. Our models support this hypothesis by predicting export of lactate from both neurons and astrocytes during peak ATP demand, reproducing results from experimental measurements reported in the literature. Furthermore, our models provide potential explanation for parts of the astrocyte-neuron lactate shuttle theory, which is recapitulated under some conditions in the brain, while contradicting other aspects of the theory. We conclude that enzyme usage per pathway, enzyme utilization over time, and enzyme transportation are important factors for defining the optimal distribution of ATP production pathways, opening a broad avenue to explore in brain metabolism.

brain metabolism

metabolism

genome-scale models

mathematical modeling

ANLS

Author

Johan Gustafsson

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering

Jonathan Robinson

BioInnovation Institute

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Henrik Zetterberg

University College London (UCL)

University of Gothenburg

Jens B Nielsen

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

0027-8424 (ISSN) 1091-6490 (eISSN)

Vol. 121 7 e2305035121

Subject Categories

Pharmaceutical Sciences

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Biocatalysis and Enzyme Technology

DOI

10.1073/pnas.2305035121

PubMed

38315844

More information

Latest update

3/28/2024