Lactate: the ugly duckling of energy metabolism
Autor: | Joshua D. Rabinowitz, Sven Enerbäck |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Ethanol
Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Citric Acid Cycle Cell Biology Carbohydrate Carbohydrate metabolism Article Citric acid cycle chemistry.chemical_compound Glucose chemistry Biochemistry Physiology (medical) Internal Medicine Animals Humans Metabolic waste Fermentation Glycolysis NAD+ kinase Lactic Acid Energy Metabolism |
Zdroj: | Nat Metab |
ISSN: | 2522-5812 |
Popis: | Lactate, perhaps the best-known metabolic waste product, was first isolated from sour milk, in which it is produced by lactobacilli. Whereas microbes also generate other fermentation products, such as ethanol or acetone, lactate dominates in mammals. Lactate production increases when the demand for ATP and oxygen exceeds supply, as occurs during intense exercise and ischaemia. The build-up of lactate in stressed muscle and ischaemic tissues has established lactate's reputation as a deleterious waste product. In this Perspective, we summarize emerging evidence that, in mammals, lactate also serves as a major circulating carbohydrate fuel. By providing mammalian cells with both a convenient source and sink for three-carbon compounds, circulating lactate enables the uncoupling of carbohydrate-driven mitochondrial energy generation from glycolysis. Lactate and pyruvate together serve as a circulating redox buffer that equilibrates the NADH/NAD ratio across cells and tissues. This reconceptualization of lactate as a fuel-analogous to how Hans Christian Andersen's ugly duckling is actually a beautiful swan-has the potential to reshape the field of energy metabolism. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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