Artículo de revista
Possible ATP trafficking by ATP-shuttles in the olfactory cilia and glucose transfer across the olfactory mucosa
Fecha
2019Registro en:
FEBS Letters, Volumen 593, Issue 6, 2019, Pages 601-610
18733468
00145793
10.1002/1873-3468.13346
Autor
Acevedo, Claudia
Blanchard, Kris
Bacigalupo Vicuña, Juan
Vergara Montecinos, Cecilia
Institución
Resumen
Odor transduction in the cilia of olfactory sensory neurons involves several ATP-requiring enzymes. ATP is generated by glycolysis in the ciliary lumen, using glucose incorporated from surrounding mucus, and by oxidative phosphorylation in the dendrite. During prolonged stimulation, the cilia maintain ATP levels along their length, by unknown means. We used immunochemistry, RT-PCR, and immunoblotting to explore possible underlying mechanisms. We found the ATP-shuttles, adenylate and creatine kinases, capable of equilibrating ATP. We also investigated how glucose delivered by blood vessels in the olfactory mucosa reaches the mucus. We detected, in sustentacular and Bowman's gland cells, the crucial enzyme in glucose secretion glucose-6-phosphatase, implicating both cell types as putative glucose pathways. We propose a model accounting for both processes.