Gibbs S R, deRoos R M
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia 65211.
J Exp Zool. 1991 Apr;258(1):14-23. doi: 10.1002/jez.1402580103.
Serial, paired blood samples were collected via cannulae chronically placed in the common carotid artery (A) to and the internal jugular vein (V) from the brain of the fasted adult American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana). Plasma glucose, beta-hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate, lactate, and alanine levels were measured by standard enzymatic procedures. Cannula failure ended sampling after 1-2 days in most animals. The common carotid artery plasma metabolite levels were greatest at the time of surgery and subsequently declined to relatively stable levels. The summarized data indicated glucose uptake and alanine release by the brain, but no significant beta-hydroxybutyrate or lactate A-V percentage changes. Initially, acetoacetate levels also were measured, but were discontinued in favor of continued beta-hydroxybutyrate determinations when no significant A-V percentage changes occurred. Separate analysis of the metabolite levels during the surgery and recovery period (less than or equal to 24 hr) and the "normal" under the experimental conditions period (greater than 24 hr) revealed that summarizing the data masked important A-V percentage changes during the two different physiological conditions. Glucose was the only metabolite extracted by the brain during the less than or equal to 24 hr period of elevated and subsequently declining metabolite levels. In contrast, glucose uptake did not occur during the greater than 24 hr period of stable levels, but there was lactate release. If the bullfrog brain stores substantial glycogen as do the other ectothermic vertebrates studied, glucose uptake when plasma levels are elevated, for example after feeding, may serve both to fuel the brain and to replenish endogenous glycogen reserves that may be mobilized to provide glucose for the brain after plasma glucose levels return to normal. Assuming that mammalian and bullfrog metabolic pathways are the same, the release of lactate and alanine by the brain, possibly to remove excess pyruvate and to regenerate NAD+, is consistent with this hypothesis. It remains to be determined for how long endogenous energy sources alone can support the bullfrog brain, and if plasma glucose, ketones, and/or other energy sources are extracted as endogenous brain fuels become exhausted.
通过长期插入禁食成年美国牛蛙(牛蛙)大脑的颈总动脉(A)和颈内静脉(V)的套管采集系列配对血样。采用标准酶法测定血浆葡萄糖、β-羟基丁酸、乙酰乙酸、乳酸和丙氨酸水平。在大多数动物中,套管故障导致在1 - 2天后结束采样。颈总动脉血浆代谢物水平在手术时最高,随后降至相对稳定水平。汇总数据表明大脑摄取葡萄糖并释放丙氨酸,但β-羟基丁酸或乳酸的动静脉百分比无显著变化。最初也测量了乙酰乙酸水平,但当动静脉百分比无显著变化时,为了继续测定β-羟基丁酸而停止了该测定。对手术和恢复期间(小于或等于24小时)以及实验条件下的“正常”期间(大于24小时)的代谢物水平进行单独分析发现,汇总数据掩盖了两种不同生理条件下重要的动静脉百分比变化。在代谢物水平升高随后下降的小于或等于24小时期间,葡萄糖是大脑提取的唯一代谢物。相比之下,在大于24小时的稳定水平期间未发生葡萄糖摄取,但有乳酸释放。如果牛蛙大脑像其他已研究的变温脊椎动物一样储存大量糖原,那么当血浆水平升高时(例如进食后)摄取葡萄糖可能既为大脑提供能量,又补充内源性糖原储备,这些储备在血浆葡萄糖水平恢复正常后可能被动员起来为大脑提供葡萄糖。假设哺乳动物和牛蛙的代谢途径相同,大脑释放乳酸和丙氨酸,可能是为了去除多余的丙酮酸并再生NAD +,这与该假设一致。内源性能量来源单独能支持牛蛙大脑多长时间,以及当内源性脑燃料耗尽时血浆葡萄糖、酮类和/或其他能量来源是否被提取,仍有待确定。