Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Early Decline in Glucose Transport and Metabolism Precedes Shift to Ketogenic System in Female Aging and Alzheimer's Mouse Brain: Implication for Bioenergetic Intervention
Fan Ding, Jia Yao, Jamaica R. Rettberg, Shuhua Chen, Roberta Dı́az Brinton
PLoS ONE · 2013 · ▲ 276 citations
Abstract
We previously demonstrated that mitochondrial bioenergetic deficits in the female brain accompanied reproductive senescence(definition) and was accompanied by a shift from an aerobic glycolytic to a ketogenic phenotype. Herein, we investigated the relationship between systems of fuel supply, transport and mitochondrial metabolic enzyme expression/activity during aging (3-15 months) in the hippocampus of nontransgenic (nonTg) background and 3xTgAD female mice. Results indicate that during female brain aging, both nonTg and 3xTgAD brains undergo significant decline in glucose transport, as detected by FDG-microPET, between 6-9 months of age just prior to the transition into reproductive senescence. The deficit in brain metabolism was sustained thereafter. Decline in glucose transport coincided with significant decline in neuronal glucose transporter expression and hexokinase activity with a concomitant rise in phosphorylated/inactivated pyruvate dehydrogenase. Lactate utilization declined in parallel to the decline in glucose transport suggesting lactate did not serve as an alternative fuel. An adaptive response in the nonTg hippocampus was a shift to transport and utilization of ketone bodies as an alternative fuel. In the 3xTgAD brain, utilization of ketone bodies as an alternative fuel was evident at the earliest age investigated and declined thereafter. The 3xTgAD adaptive response was to substantially increase monocarboxylate transporters in neurons while decreasing their expression at the BBB and in astrocytes. Collectively, these data indicate that the earliest change in the metabolic system of the aging female brain is the decline in neuronal glucose transport and metabolism followed by decline in mitochondrial function. The adaptive shift to the ketogenic system as an alternative fuel coincided with decline in mitochondrial function. Translationally, these data provide insights into the earliest events in bioenergetic aging of the female brain and provide potential targets for preventing shifts to less efficient bioenergetic fuels and transition to the ketogenic phenotype of the Alzheimer's brain.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pone.0079977
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-12 MST
Cite this
APA
Ding, F., Yao, J., Rettberg, J.R., Chen, S., & Brinton, R.D. (2013). Early Decline in Glucose Transport and Metabolism Precedes Shift to Ketogenic System in Female Aging and Alzheimer's Mouse Brain: Implication for Bioenergetic Intervention. <em>PLoS ONE</em>. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079977
Vancouver
Ding F, Yao J, Rettberg JR, Chen S, Brinton RD. Early Decline in Glucose Transport and Metabolism Precedes Shift to Ketogenic System in Female Aging and Alzheimer's Mouse Brain: Implication for Bioenergetic Intervention. PLoS ONE. 2013. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0079977.
BibTeX
@article{fan2013EarlyD,
title = {Early Decline in Glucose Transport and Metabolism Precedes Shift to Ketogenic System in Female Aging and Alzheimer's Mouse Brain: Implication for Bioenergetic Intervention},
author = {Fan Ding and Jia Yao and Jamaica R. Rettberg and Shuhua Chen and Roberta Dı́az Brinton},
journal = {PLoS ONE},
year = {2013},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0079977},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2009
Preprint · OA
Mitochondrial bioenergetic deficit precedes Alzheimer's pathology in female mouse model of Alzheimer's disease
FEBS Letters 2022
Citation only
Mitochondria, energy, and metabolism in neuronal health and disease
Human Molecular Genetics 2012
Open access · OA
Abnormal interaction between the mitochondrial fission protein Drp1 and hyperphosphorylated tau in Alzheimer's disease neurons: implications for mitochondrial dysfunction and neuronal damage
Quality of Life Research 2017
Open access · CC-BY
Race-specific associations between health-related quality of life and cellular aging among adults in the United States: evidence from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
Stanford University 2027
Open access · US-GOV
Vagus Nerve Stimulation to Enhance Memory in Aging
Journal of Inflammation Research 2021
Open access · CC-BY