Cerebral creatine kinase deficiency influences metabolite levels and morphology in the mouse brain: A quantitative in vivo 1H and 31P magnetic resonance study

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Abstract

Creatine kinase (CK)-catalysed ATP-phosphocreatine (PCr) exchange is considered to play a key role in energy homeostasis of the brain. This study assessed the metabolic and anatomical consequences of partial or complete depletion of this system in transgenic mice without cytosolic B-CK (B-CK-/-), mitochondrial ubiquitous CK (UbCKmit-/-), or both isoenzymes (CK -/-), using non-invasive quantitative magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and spectroscopy. MR imaging revealed an increase in ventricle size in a subset of B-CK-/- mice, but not in animals with UbCKmit or compound CK mutations. Mice lacking single CK isoenzymes had normal levels of high-energy metabolites and tissue pH. In the brains of CK double knockouts pH and ATP and Pi levels were also normal, even though PCr had become completely undetectable. Moreover, a 20-30% decrease was observed in the level of total creatine and a similar increase in the level of neuronal N-acetyl-aspartate compounds. Although CKs themselves are not evenly distributed throughout the CNS, these alterations were uniform and concordant across different brain regions. Changes in myo-inositol and glutamate peaks did appear to be mutation type and brain area specific. Our results challenge current models for the biological significance of the PCr-CK energy system and suggest a multifaceted role for creatine in the brain.

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In ’T Zandt, H. J. A., Renema, W. K. J., Streijger, F., Jost, C., Klomp, D. W. J., Oerlemans, F., … Heerschap, A. (2004). Cerebral creatine kinase deficiency influences metabolite levels and morphology in the mouse brain: A quantitative in vivo 1H and 31P magnetic resonance study. Journal of Neurochemistry, 90(6), 1321–1330. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-4159.2004.02599.x

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