Metabolomic Assays of Postmortem Brain Extracts: Pitfalls in Extrapolation of Concentrations of Glucose and Amino Acids to Metabolic Dysregulation In Vivo in Neurological Diseases.

Metabolomic Assays of Postmortem Brain Extracts: Pitfalls in Extrapolation of Concentrations of Glucose and Amino Acids to Metabolic Dysregulation In Vivo in Neurological Diseases. Neurochem Res. 2018 Aug 16;: Authors: Dienel GA Abstract Glucose utilization is reduced in vulnerable brain regions affected by neurological disorders, especially Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the basis for abnormal glucose homeostasis is unknown. Studies of brain-bank human tissue have made major contributions to understanding complex aspects of neurological, psychiatric, and neurodegenerative diseases, but they are not appropriate for metabolomic analysis of labile metabolites because postmortem intervals between death and tissue freezing are much too long. Recent reports of postmortem brain glucose levels led to suggestions that AD patients may be hyperglycemic and that elevated brain glucose levels along with reduced glycolytic activity reveal abnormal glucose homeostasis before clinical symptoms become manifest. These conclusions are, however, questioned because virtually all brain glucose is consumed within minutes after death, followed by progressive increases in glucose and amino acid levels, presumably due to autolytic changes. To illustrate pitfalls in use of autopsy material for metabolomic assays of labile metabolites, data from living human brain are compared with those from autopsy samples, and metabolism at the onset of postmortem ischemia i...
Source: Neurochemical Research - Category: Neuroscience Authors: Tags: Neurochem Res Source Type: research