Brain glycogen metabolism was recently observed in vivo and found to be very slow in the lightly alpha-chloralose anesthetized rat [J. Neurochem. 73 (1999) 1300]. Based on that slow turnover, the total glycogen content in the awake rat brain and its turnover time were assessed after administering 13C-labeled glucose for 48 h. Label incorporation into glycogen, glucose, amino acid, and N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA) resonances was observed. The amount of 13C label incorporated into glycogen was variable and did not correlate with that in glutamate (r=-0.1, P>0.86). However, the amount of 13C label incorporated into glycogen was very similar to that in NAA (r=0.93), implying similar turnover times between brain glycogen and NAA (approximately 10 h). Absolute quantification of the total concentration of brain glycogen in the awake, normoglycemic rat yielded 3.3+/-0.8 micromol/g (n=6, mean+/-S.D.).
Tamar Kohn, Aleksandar Antanasijevic, Kiruthika Kumar, Shotaro Torii
Luc Reymond, Fabien Kuttler, Milena Maria Schuhmacher, Manon Sandra Bardyn, Daria Korotkova, Triana Amen
Françoise Gisou van der Goot Grunberg, Laurence Gouzi Abrami, Francisco De Magalhães Sarmento R De Mesquita