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A glucose-sensing mechanism with glucose transporter-1 and pyruvate kinase in the area postrema regulates hepatic glucose production in rats.

The area postrema (AP) of the brain is exposed to circulating metabolites and hormones. However, whether AP detects glucose changes to exert biological responses remains unknown. Its neighboring nuclei, the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), responds to acute glucose infusion by inhibiting hepatic glucose production, but the mechanism also remains elusive. Herein, we characterized AP and NTS glucose-sensing mechanisms. Infusion of glucose into the AP, like the NTS, of chow rats suppressed glucose production during the pancreatic (basal insulin)-euglycemic clamps. Glucose transporter-1 or pyruvate kinase lentiviral-mediated knockdown in the AP negated AP glucose infusion to lower glucose production, while the glucoregulatory effect of NTS glucose infusion was also negated by knocking down glucose transporter-1 or pyruvate kinase in the NTS. Furthermore, we determined that high-fat (HF) feeding disrupts glucose infusion to lower glucose production in association with a modest reduction in expression of glucose transporter-1, but not pyruvate kinase, in the AP and NTS. However, pyruvate dehydrogenase activator dichloroacetate infusion into the AP or NTS that enhanced downstream pyruvate metabolism and recapitulated the glucoregulatory effect of glucose in chow rats still failed to lower glucose production in HF rats. We discovered that a glucose transporter-1 and pyruvate kinase-dependent glucose-sensing mechanism in the AP (as well as the NTS) lowers glucose production in chow rats, and that HF disrupts the glucose-sensing mechanism that is downstream of pyruvate metabolism in the AP and NTS. These findings highlight the role of AP and NTS in mediating glucose to regulate hepatic glucose production.

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