Monitoring ATP dynamics in electrically active white matter tracts

Andrea Trevisiol(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine), Aiman S. Saab(University of Zurich), Ulrike Winkler(Leipzig University), Grit Marx(Leipzig University), Hiromi Imamura(Kyoto University), Wiebke Möbius(Nanoscale Microscopy and Molecular Physiology of the Brain Cluster of Excellence 171 — DFG Research Center 103), Kathrin Kusch(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine), Klaus‐Armin Nave(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine), Johannes Hirrlinger(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine)
eLife
April 17, 2017
Cited by 153Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

In several neurodegenerative diseases and myelin disorders, the degeneration profiles of myelinated axons are compatible with underlying energy deficits. However, it is presently impossible to measure selectively axonal ATP levels in the electrically active nervous system. We combined transgenic expression of an ATP-sensor in neurons of mice with confocal FRET imaging and electrophysiological recordings of acutely isolated optic nerves. This allowed us to monitor dynamic changes and activity-dependent axonal ATP homeostasis at the cellular level and in real time. We find that changes in ATP levels correlate well with compound action potentials. However, this correlation is disrupted when metabolism of lactate is inhibited, suggesting that axonal glycolysis products are not sufficient to maintain mitochondrial energy metabolism of electrically active axons. The combined monitoring of cellular ATP and electrical activity is a novel tool to study neuronal and glial energy metabolism in normal physiology and in models of neurodegenerative disorders.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis