Carbohydrate adaptation drives liver-brain axis maturation
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Mammalian postnatal life requires adaptation to a carbohydrate-rich diet, yet how metabolic programs are coordinated within and across organs is unclear. Using time-resolved transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses from the neonatal period through adulthood, we show that mouse liver rapidly acquires oxidative and detoxification capacity after weaning. This transition enables the brain to establish energy-sufficient, low-toxicity metabolic environment for neuronal function. This maturation process is marked by progressive activation of the hepatic electron transport chain (ETC), with the mitochondrial RNA endoribonuclease LACTB2 acting as a key regulator. LACTB2 prevents the accumulation of mitochondrial RNAs and sustains expression of mtDNA-encoded ETC subunits, thereby preserving mitochondrial competence for oxidative metabolism. LACTB2 is postnatally induced in hepatocytes, and its loss causes defective glucose utilization, systemic metabolic toxicity, and impaired brain metabolism and myelination, leading to prepubertal lethality, particularly in males. Restoring ETC function through liver-targeted expression of yeast NADH dehydrogenase NDI1, inhibiting the integrated stress response or ammonia scavenging improved survival. Our findings identify LACTB2-dependent hepatic mitochondrial maturation as a central mechanism that aligns carbohydrate adaptation with the liver-brain metabolic coordination to support early-life development.