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Region-selective effects of thiamine deficiency on cerebral metabolism in pyrithiamine-treated ratsNavarro, Darren. January 2008 (has links)
Pyrithiamine-induced thiamine deficiency in rats is a well-established animal model of Wernicke's Encephalopathy (WE). This thesis project, submitted as four articles, presents an examination of metabolic events that contribute to the selective neuronal lesions observed in the medial thalamus (MT) of thiamine-deficient (TD) rat. In addition, the phenomenon of glucose-precipitated worsening of neurological status in WE patients (Wallis et al., 1978; Watson et al., 1981) is explored. / Lactate accumulation is known to occur selectively in regions of the TD brain, which ultimately express neuronal cell death (McCandless, 1982; Munujos et al., 1996). In Article 1, the metabolic origin and cellular localization of region-selective lactate accumulation in the MT of TD rats was studied using combined 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Parallel studies were performed to examine the effects of glucose loading on regional brain lactate synthesis in TD animals. Thiamine deficiency caused focal increases in the de novo synthesis of lactate via elevated glycolytic flux in the MT, while contribution via pyruvate recycling and the periphery remained nominal. Lactate levels remained unaltered in the frontal cortex (FC), a brain region that is spared in thiamine deficiency. Administration of a glucose load intensified the selective increases in lactate de novo synthesis and accumulation in the MT of TD rats, positing a role for lactic acidosis in the glucose-precipitated worsening of neurological status in TD patients. Accordingly, Article 2 addresses the effect of glucose loading on local cerebral pH in the vulnerable MT, compared to the FC, of TD rats. Administration of a glucose load resulted in detrimental decreases in regional pH selectively in the MT, implying that alterations of brain pH contribute to the pathogenesis of thalamic neuronal damage and consequent cerebral dysfunction in WE. / Region-specific alterations in the steady state levels of cerebral amino acid neurotransmitters have been well-documented in experimental animal models of thiamine deficiency (Butterworth et al., 1979; Butterworth & Heroux, 1989; Gaitonde et al., 1975; Plaitakis et al., 1979); however, the dynamics of these changes have never been systematically explored. In Article 3, we examined the metabolic fluxes through thiamine-dependent pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (alpha-KGDH) using multinuclear NMR spectroscopy. Furthermore the cellular localization of the metabolic changes in relation to regional vulnerability to thiamine deficiency was addressed. Our studies clearly demonstrate that early decreases m metabolic flux through alpha-KGDH result in commensurate declines in aspartate concentrations in the MT of TD rats. Impairments to PDH flux manifest secondarily to the metabolic block at alpha-KGDH, likely due to depleted oxaloacetate pools. As a result of impaired pyruvate oxidation, declines in the de novo synthesis of glutamate and GABA ensue. The present findings also suggest that inhibition of flux through alpha-KGDH in TD brain occurs primarily in the neurons, while astrocytes possess compensatory mechanisms, i.e. the anaplerotic pathway, to replenish oxaloacetate concentrations via metabolic pathways that do not involve thiamine-dependent enzymes. / In Article 4, we investigated the regional effects of thiamine deficiency on the activity of thiamine-dependent branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKDH) and the resultant effects on regional cerebral branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) oxidation. Thiamine deficiency resulted in significant impairments in BCKDH activity; while parallel studies on enzyme distribution confirmed a lower oxidative capacity for BCAAs in the MT compared with the Fe. / The data presented in these four articles confirm and extend findings for the region-selective impairments in thiamine-dependent metabolic processes as the foundation of vulnerability of the MT to thiamine deficiency. In addition, glucose loading of TD rats exacerbates both lactic acidosis and impaired pyruvate oxidation in this vulnerable brain region, positing a role for these processes in the glucose-precipitated worsening of neurological status in TD patients. Impaired oxidative metabolism of glucose and BCAAs in the MT leads to the accumulation of potentially harmful metabolic intermediates, contributing to the mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular energy failure and ultimately neuronal cell death observed in thiamine deficiency.
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Region-selective effects of thiamine deficiency on cerebral metabolism in pyrithiamine-treated ratsNavarro, Darren. January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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