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Article Abstract

Alpha-2 (α2-) tanycytes line the ventral wall of the third ventricle where they ostensibly engage in metabolic screening. The oxidizable glycolytic end-product L-lactate is a gauge of hindbrain energy stability that is imparted to forebrain glucose-regulatory loci by norepinephrine signaling. Current research used a validated whole-animal model for insulin-induced hypoglycemia (IIH) to address the premise that hindbrain lactate status imposes sex-specific control of eu- and/or hypoglycemic patterns of α2-tanycyte chemosensor gene transcription in vivo. Vimentin-immunopositive α2-tanycytes were laser-catapult-microdissected from male and female brain sections after subcutaneous insulin injection and caudal fourth ventricular (CV4) L-lactate- or vehicle infusion for single-cell multiplex qPCR analysis of glucose and energy sensor gene expression. Hindbrain lactate infusion reversed IIH repression of α2-tanycyte glucose transporter-2 mRNA in females and amplified (males) or reversed (females) up-regulated glucokinase gene transcription. Lactate increased α2-tanycyte ATP-sensitive potassium channel Kir6.2 mRNA levels in hypoglycemic rats of each sex, reversing transcriptional inhibition in males or amplifying up-regulated expression in females. In both sexes, IIH-associated down-regulation of energy sensor 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase catalytic subunit isoforms alpha-1 and - 2 gene profiles was correspondingly unaffected or reversed by lactate. Hypoglycemia increased or decreased α2-tanycyte alpha and beta receptor mRNA content, respectively; lactate caused opposite, sex-specific adjustments in transcriptional reactivity of the former gene yet did not affect the latter profile in either sex. Results show that hypothalamic α2-tanycytes are direct target for norepinephrine stimulation and document sex-dimorphic hindbrain lactoprivic regulation of chemosensor gene transcriptional responses to in vivo hypoglycemia.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11064-025-04533-5DOI Listing

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Alpha-2 (α2-) tanycytes line the ventral wall of the third ventricle where they ostensibly engage in metabolic screening. The oxidizable glycolytic end-product L-lactate is a gauge of hindbrain energy stability that is imparted to forebrain glucose-regulatory loci by norepinephrine signaling. Current research used a validated whole-animal model for insulin-induced hypoglycemia (IIH) to address the premise that hindbrain lactate status imposes sex-specific control of eu- and/or hypoglycemic patterns of α2-tanycyte chemosensor gene transcription in vivo.

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Background: The oxidizable glycolytic end-product L-lactate is a gauge of nerve cell metabolic fuel stability that metabolic-sensory hindbrain A2 noradrenergic neurons impart to the brain glucose-regulatory network. Current research investigated the premise that hindbrain lactate deficiency exerts sex-specific control of energy sensor and transmitter marker protein responses to hypoglycemia in ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN) glucose-regulatory nitrergic and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurons.

Methods: Nitric oxide synthase (nNOS)- or glutamate decarboxylase (GAD)-immunoreactive neurons were laser-catapult-microdissected from male and female rat VMN after subcutaneous insulin injection and caudal fourth ventricular L-lactate or vehicle infusion for Western blot protein analysis.

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The catecholamine norepinephrine (NE) links hindbrain metabolic‑sensory neurons with downstream gluco‑regulatory loci, including the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN). Exogenous NE up‑regulates VMN expression of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), biomarker for the gluco‑inhibitory transmitter γ‑aminobutryic acid (GABA). Brain glycogen phosphorylase (GP)‑muscle (GPmm) and ‑brain (GPbb) variants are stimulated in vitro by NE or energy deficiency, respectively.

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Hindbrain energy state shapes hypothalamic control of glucostasis. Dorsal vagal complex (DVC) L-lactate deficiency is a potent glucose-stimulatory signal that triggers neuronal transcriptional activation in key hypothalamic metabolic loci. The energy gauge AMPK is activated in DVC metabolic-sensory A2 noradrenergic neurons by hypoglycemia-associated lactoprivation, but sensor reactivity is diminished by antecedent hypoglycemia (AH).

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