The high-metabolic demand of neurons and their reliance on glucose as an energy source places them atrisk for dysfunction
and death under conditions of metabolic and oxidative stress. Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are mitochodrial inner membrane proteins
implicated in the regulation of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ
m) and cellular energy metabolism. The authors cloned UCP4 cDNA from mouse and rat brain, and demonstrate that UCP4 mRNA is
expressed abundantly in brain and at particularly high levels in populations of neurons believed to have high-energy requirements.
Neural cells with increased levels of UCP4 exhibit decreased ΔΨ
m, reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and decreased mitochondrial calcium accumulation. UCP4 expressing cells
also exhibited changes of oxygen-consumption rate, GDP sensitivity, and response of ΔΨ
m to oligomycin that were consistent with mitochondrial uncoupling. UCP4 modulates neuronal energy metabolism by increasing
glucose uptake and shifting the mode of ATP production from mitochodnrial respiration to glycolysis, thereby maintaining cellular
ATP levels. The UCP4-mediated shift in energy metabolism reduces ROS production and increases the resistance of neurons to
oxidative and mitochondrial stress. Knockdown of UCP4 expression by RNA interference in primary hippocampal neurons results
in mitochondrial calcium overload and cell death. UCP4-mRNA expression is increased in neurons exposed to cold temperatures
and in brain cells of rats maintained on caloric restriction, suggesting a role for UCP4 in the previously reported antiageing
and neuroprotective effects of caloric restriction. By shifting energy metabolism to reduce ROS production and cellular reliance
on mitochondrial respiration, UCP4 can protect neurons against oxidative stress and calcium overload.
These authors made equal contributions to this research.