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1.
The fate of supplemental carnitine was studied in human subjects treated with drugs known to cause carnitine deficiency. Six children were treated with pivampicillin and equimolar L-carnitine for 7 days. On the last day of treatment, the plasma levels of total and free carnitine were decreased, but acylcarnitine levels were increased. A 12-fold increase in urinary excretion of acylcarnitines was found; it increased from 188.5 +/- 82.7 to 2218.4 +/- 484.1 mumole/day, and 84% was pivaloylcarnitine. Free carnitine excretion was reduced. Ten epileptic children on chronic valproate treatment received equimolar carnitine for a 2-week period. Plasma carnitine levels were elevated on the last day of treatment. A 3.4-fold increase in urinary acylcarnitines was found, but most of the excreted carnitines were free (64.5-fold increases). These data show that pivalate is readily converted to carnitine esters, in contrast to the limited conversion of valproate to acylcarnitines in humans.  相似文献   

2.
The interaction of exogenous carnitine with whole body carnitine homeostasis was characterized in the rat. Carnitine was administered in pharmacologic doses (0-33.3 mumols/100 g body weight) by bolus, intravenous injection, and plasma, urine, liver, skeletal muscle and heart content of carnitine and acylcarnitines quantitated over a 48 h period. Pre-injection urinary carnitine excretion was circadian as excretion rates were increased 2-fold during the lights-off cycle as compared with the lights-on cycle. Following carnitine administration, there was an increase in urinary total carnitine excretion which accounted for approx. 60% of the administered carnitine at doses above 8.3 mumols/100 g body weight. Urinary acylcarnitine excretion was increased following carnitine administration in a dose-dependent fashion. During the 24 h following administration of 16.7 mumols [14C]carnitine/100 g body weight, urinary carnitine specific activity averaged only 72 +/- 4% of the injection solution specific activity. This dilution of the [14C]carnitine specific activity suggests that endogenous carnitine contributed to the increased net urinary carnitine excretion following carnitine administration. 5 min after administration of 16.7 mumol carnitine/100 g body weight approx. 80% of the injected carnitine was in the extracellular fluid compartment and 5% in the liver. Plasma, liver and soleus total carnitine contents were increased 6 h after administration of 16.7 mumols carnitine/100 g body weight. 6 h post-administration, 37% of the dose was recovered in the urine, 12% remained in the extracellular compartment, 9% was in the liver and 22% was distributed in the skeletal muscle. In liver and plasma, short chain acylcarnitine content was increased 5 min and 6 h post injection as compared with controls. Plasma, liver, skeletal muscle and heart carnitine contents were not different from control levels 48 h after carnitine administration. The results demonstrate that single, bolus administration of carnitine is effective in increasing urinary acylcarnitine elimination. While liver carnitine content is doubled for at least 6 h following carnitine administration, skeletal muscle and heart carnitine pools are only modestly perturbed following a single intravenous carnitine dose. The dilution of [14C]carnitine specific activity in the urine of treated animals suggests that tissue-blood carnitine or acylcarnitine exchange systems contribute to overall carnitine homeostasis following carnitine administration.  相似文献   

3.
The relationship between the acid-soluble carnitine and coenzyme A pools was studied in fed and 24-h-starved rats after carnitine administration. Carnitine given by intravenous injection at a dose of 60μmol/100g body wt. was integrated into the animal's endogenous carnitine pool. Large amounts of acylcarnitines appeared in the plasma and liver within 5min of carnitine injection. Differences in acid-soluble acylcarnitine concentrations were observed between fed and starved rats after injection and reflected the acylcarnitine/carnitine relationship seen in the endogenous carnitine pool of the two metabolic states. Thus, a larger acylcarnitine production was seen in starved animals and indicated a greater source of accessible acyl-CoA molecules. In addition to changes in the amount of acylcarnitines present, the specific acyl groups present also varied between groups of animals. Acetylcarnitine made up 37 and 53% of liver acid-soluble acylcarnitines in uninjected fed and starved animals respectively. At 5min after carnitine injection hepatic acid-soluble acylcarnitines were 41 and 73% in the form of acetylcarnitine in fed and starved rats respectively. Despite these large changes in carnitine and acylcarnitines, no changes were observed in plasma non-esterified fatty acid or β-hydroxybutyrate concentrations in either fed or starved rats. Additionally, measurement of acetyl-CoA, coenzyme A, total acid-soluble CoA and acid-insoluble CoA demonstrated that the hepatic CoA pool was resistant to carnitine-induced changes. This lack of change in the hepatic CoA pool or ketone-body production while acyl groups are shunted from acyl-CoA molecules to acylcarnitines suggests a low flux through the carnitine pool compared with the CoA pool. These results support the concept that the carnitine/acid-soluble acylcarnitine pool reflects changes in, rather than inducing changes in, the hepatic CoA/acyl-CoA pool.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of feeding the peroxisome proliferators ciprofibrate (a hypolipidaemic analogue of clofibrate) or POCA (2-[5-(4-chlorophenyl)pentyl]oxirane-2-carboxylate) (an inhibitor of CPT I) to rats for 5 days on the distribution of carnitine and acylcarnitine esters between liver, plasma and muscle and on hepatic CoA concentrations (free and acylated) and activities of carnitine acetyltransferase and acyl-CoA hydrolases were determined. Ciprofibrate and POCA increased hepatic [total CoA] by 2 and 2.5 times respectively, and [total carnitine] by 4.4 and 1.9 times respectively, but decreased plasma [carnitine] by 36-46%. POCA had no effect on either urinary excretion of acylcarnitine esters or [acylcarnitine] in skeletal muscle. By contrast, ciprofibrate decreased [acylcarnitine] and [total carnitine] in muscle. In liver, ciprofibrate increased the [carnitine]/[CoA] ratio and caused a larger increase in [acylcarnitine] (7-fold) than in [carnitine] (4-fold), thereby increasing the [short-chain acylcarnitine]/[carnitine] ratio. POCA did not affect the [carnitine]/[CoA] and the [short-chain acylcarnitine]/[carnitine] ratios, but it decreased the [long-chain acylcarnitine]/[carnitine] ratio. Ciprofibrate and POCA increased the activities of acyl-CoA hydrolases, and carnitine acetyltransferase activity was increased 28-fold and 6-fold by ciprofibrate and POCA respectively. In cultures of hepatocytes, ciprofibrate caused similar changes in enzyme activity to those observed in vivo, although [carnitine] decreased with time. The results suggest that: (1) the reactions catalysed by the short-chain carnitine acyltransferases, but not by the carnitine palmitoyltransferases, are near equilibrium in liver both before and after modification of metabolism by administration of ciprofibrate or POCA; (2) the increase in hepatic [carnitine] after ciprofibrate or POCA feeding can be explained by redistribution of carnitine between tissues; (3) the activity of carnitine acetyltransferase and [total carnitine] in liver are closely related.  相似文献   

5.
The administration in vivo of the cobalamin analogue hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] inhibits hepatic L-methylmalonyl-CoA mutase activity. The current studies characterize in vivo and in vitro the hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam]-treated rat as a model of disordered propionate and methylmalonic acid metabolism. Treatment of rats with hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] (2 micrograms/h by osmotic minipump) increased urinary methylmalonic acid excretion from 0.55 mumol/day to 390 mumol/day after 2 weeks. Hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] treatment was associated with increased urinary propionylcarnitine excretion and increased short-chain acylcarnitine concentrations in plasma and liver. Hepatocytes isolated from cobalamin-analogue-treated rats metabolized propionate (1.0 mM) to CO2 and glucose at rates which were only 18% and 1% respectively of those observed in hepatocytes from control (saline-treated) rats. In contrast, rates of pyruvate and palmitate oxidation were higher than control in hepatocytes from the hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam]-treated rats. In hepatocytes from hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam]-treated rats, propionylcarnitine was the dominant product generated from propionate when carnitine (10 mM) was present. The addition of carnitine thus resulted in a 4-fold increase in total propionate utilization under these conditions. Hepatocytes from hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam]-treated rats were more sensitive than control hepatocytes to inhibition of palmitate oxidation by propionate. This inhibition of palmitate oxidation was partially reversed by addition of carnitine. Thus hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] treatment in vivo rapidly causes a severe defect in propionate metabolism. The consequences of this metabolic defect in vivo and in vitro are those predicted on the basis of propionyl-CoA and methylmalonyl-CoA accumulation. The cobalamin-analogue-treated rat provides a useful model for studying metabolism under conditions of a metabolic defect causing acyl-CoA accretion.  相似文献   

6.
Patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) have abnormalities of carnitine metabolism that may contribute to their functional impairment. To test the hypothesis that muscle acylcarnitine generation (intermediates in oxidative metabolism) in patients with PAD provides a marker of the muscle dysfunction, 10 patients with unilateral PAD and 6 age-matched control subjects were studied at rest, and the patients were studied during exercise. At rest, biopsies of the gastrocnemius muscle in the patients' nonsymptomatic leg revealed a normal carnitine pool and lactate content compared with control subjects. In contrast, the patients' diseased leg had higher contents of lactate and long-chain acylcarnitines than controls. The muscle short-chain acylcarnitine content in the patients' diseased leg at rest was inversely correlated with peak exercise performance (r = -0.75, P less than 0.05). With graded treadmill exercise, only patients who exceeded their individual lactate threshold had an increase in muscle short-chain acylcarnitine content in the nonsymptomatic leg, which was identical to the muscle carnitine response in normal subjects. In the patients' diseased leg, muscle short-chain acylcarnitine content increased with exercise from 440 +/- 130 to 900 +/- 200 (SE) nmol/g (P less than 0.05). In contrast to the nonsymptomatic leg, there was no increase in muscle lactate content in the diseased leg with exercise, and the change in muscle carnitine metabolism was correlated with exercise duration (r = 0.82, P less than 0.01) and not with the lactate threshold. We conclude that energy metabolism in ischemic muscle of patients with PAD is characterized by the accumulation of acylcarnitines.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
A high-performance liquid chromatographic method for the separation of acylcarnitines after derivatization with 4'-bromophenacyl trifluoromethanesulfonate is presented. Derivatization of acylcarnitines was achieved at room temperature within 10 min. Separation of the acylcarnitine 4'-bromophenacyl esters was accomplished by high-performance liquid chromatography using as the analytical column a Resolve-PAK 5-microns C18 radially compressed cartridge eluted with a tertiary gradient containing varying proportions of water, acetonitrile, tetrahydrofuran, triethylamine, potassium phosphate, and phosphoric acid. Acylcarnitine 4'-bromophenacyl esters were detected spectrophotometrically at 254 nm. Baseline separation was obtained for a standard mixture (5 nmol of each injected) containing carnitine, acetyl-, propionyl-, butyryl-, valeryl-, hexanoyl-, heptanoyl-, octanoyl-, nonanoyl-, decanoyl-, lauroyl-, myristroyl-, palmitoyl-, and stearoylcarnitine. Nearly complete separation was obtained for a standard mixture containing butyryl-, isobutyryl-, isovaleryl-, and 2-methylbutyrylcarnitine. The method was applied to a normal human urine and then to this same urine spiked with the acylcarnitine standards. Urinary acylcarnitine profiles from patients having propionic acidemia, isovaleric acidemia, and medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency were performed. Urinary isovalerylcarnitine was quantified in the patient with isovaleric acidemia using heptanoylcarnitine as an internal standard.  相似文献   

8.
Acylcarnitines in urine from 45 patients with organic acidemias and fatty acid oxidation disorders were evaluated using ESI-MS/MS. The urinary acylcarnitine profiles in organic acidemias, SCAD deficiency and MCAD deficiency were compatible with blood acylcarnitine profiles, and abnormalities in urinary acylcarnitine profiles in these conditions were enhanced following carnitine loading. Urinary acylcarnitine profiles were not helpful for characterization of long-chain fatty acid disorders, but a combination of urine and blood acylcarnitine analysis was useful for differential diagnosis of carnitine deficit.  相似文献   

9.
1. Formiminoglutamic acid, a product of the catabolism of histidine, is excreted in abnormally large amounts in the urines of vitamin B(12)-deficient rats and of vitamin B(12)-deficient sheep; the excretion is reduced to negligible amounts after administration of vitamin B(12). 2. After administration of certain methyl donors to vitamin B(12)-deficient rats or sheep urinary excretion of formiminoglutamic acid is temporarily decreased. 3. Irrespective of the pteroylglutamic acid status of the animals neither vitamin B(12)-deficient rats nor vitamin B(12)-deficient sheep have the ability to deal efficiently with histidine. 4. In sheep, urinary excretion of formiminoglutamic acid is increased after administration of aminopterin; treatment with pteroylglutamic acid restores the ability of the animal to deal with the catabolic products of histidine. 5. The possible functions of vitamin B(12) and methionine in relieving a virtual deficiency of pteroylglutamic acid are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The amino acid histidine is metabolized to glutamic acid in mammalian tissue. Formiminoglutamic acid (FIGLU) is an intermediary in this reaction, and tetrahydrofolic acid is the coenzyme that converts it to glutamic acid. A test for folate deficiency concerns the measurement of urinary FIGLU excretion after a histidine load. It was observed that folate-deficient individuals receiving the histidine for the FIGLU test made hematological response that alleviated the anemia associated with this deficiency. This was unusual in that a biochemical test to determine the deficiency results in a beneficial effect for one aspect of the deficiency. The studies reported in this paper give a metabolic explanation for this phenomenon. Urine was collected for 24 hr from 25 folate-deficient subjects, 10 vitamin B(12)-deficient subjects, and 15 normal controls. Urinary excretion of histidine was a mean of 203 mg with a range of 130-360 mg for the folate-deficient subjects; 51.5 mg with a range of 30-76.6 mg for normal subjects; and 60.0 mg with a range of 32.3-93.0 mg for the vitamin B(12)-deficient subjects. All the folate-deficient subjects subsequently made a hematological response to the histidine administered for the FIGLU test. No hematological response was observed in the vitamin B(12)-deficient individuals. When folic acid was given to folate-deficient subjects who received no histidine, urinary histidine levels returned to normal levels rapidly and this was followed by a hematological response. Others have shown that volunteers fed a histidine-free diet developed anemia. In normal subjects, histidine is excreted much more in the urine than other essential amino acids are. Hemoglobin protein contains 10% histidine. Under normal conditions, dietary histidine can supply sufficient histidine to prevent anemia. When the dietary intake is diminished or the urinary excretion is greatly increased, anemia results. It is concluded that folate deficiency causes histidine depletion through increased urinary excretion of this amino acid. Feeding histidine replenishes tissue levels of histidine, resulting in hemoglobin regeneration. Folic acid administration results in return of histidine to normal urinary levels. Thus, a combination of folic acid histidine would be beneficial for folate deficient individuals.  相似文献   

11.
This paper describes the development of a high-performance liquid chromatographic method for the quantitation of free carnitine, total carnitine, acetylcarnitine, propionylcarnitine, isovalerylcarnitine, hexanoylcarnitine and octanoylcarnitine in human urine. Carnitine and acylcarnitines were isolated from 10 or 25 μl of urine using 0.5-ml columns of silica gel, derivatized with 4'-bromophenacyl trifluoromethanesulfonate and separated by high-performance liquid chromatography. Using 4-(N,N-dimethyl-N-ethylammonio)-3-hydroxybutanoate (“e-carnitine”) as the internal standard, standard curves (10–300 nmol/ml) were generated. Carnitine and acylcarnitines were quantified (when they were present) in normal human urine and the urine of patients diagnosed with one of three different disorders of organic acid metabolism: methylmalonic aciduria, isovaleric acidemia, and medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency.  相似文献   

12.
Urinary excretion of total carnitine in 48-h fasted rats dropped to 0.30 +/- 0.01 mumol/day from 2.23 +/- 0.4 mumol/day found in fed, control animals (mean +/- SEM). Despite this marked retention, the total carnitine content of the whole body remained constant, about 83 mumol, predicting a slow-down in biosynthesis. The conversion of butyrobetaine into carnitine takes place only in the liver in rats. 48 h of starvation caused a decrease in the liver butyrobetaine level from 11.6 +/- 1.19 nmol/g to 9.30 +/- 1.19 nmol/g, which in whole livers corresponds to a decrease from 138 nmol to 61.3 nmol. The conversion rate of butyrobetaine into carnitine was studied with radiolabelled butyrobetaine. 30 min after injection of [3H]butyrobetaine the carnitine pool in the liver of fasted rats was labelled to about the same extent as that in fed rats, but from a butyrobetaine pool with higher specific radioactivity. Therefore, the conversion rate of butyrobetaine into carnitine was reduced. The newly formed carnitine found in the whole body of fasted rats was estimated to be 59% of controls. We conclude that the biosynthesis of carnitine in fasted rats slows down, for which a decreased availability of butyrobetaine in the liver is responsible. Urinary excretion of butyrobetaine in the fasted group decreased to 74.1 nmol/day from the 222-nmol/day control value while the butyrobetaine content of whole body did not significantly decrease (2.85 mumol vs. 3.04 mumol). Urinary excretion of trimethyllysine was also depressed.  相似文献   

13.
Carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase and carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 are members of the carnitine system, which are responsible of the regulation of the mitochondrial CoA/acyl-CoA ratio and of supplying substrates for the ß-oxidation to mitochondria. This study, using cross-Linking reagent, Blue native electrophoresis and immunoprecipitation followed by detection with immunoblotting, shows conclusive evidence about the interaction between carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 and carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase supporting the channeling of acylcarnitines and carnitine at level of the inner mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Earlier studies have suggested an important role of carnitine pathway in cardiovascular pathology. However, the redistribution of carnitine and acylcarnitine pools, as a result of altered carnitine metabolism, is not clearly known in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). We compared the carnitine and acylcarnitine profiles of 65 AMI patients, including 26 ST-elevated myocardial infarction (STEMI) and 39 non-ST-elevated myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), 28 patients with chest pain and 154 normal controls. The levels of carnitine and acylcarnitines in the blood spots were determined using LC-MS/MS. Total and free carnitine levels were significantly higher in all the patient groups in the following order: STEMI > NSTEMI > chest pain. The levels of short- and medium-chain acylcarnitines were significantly higher in patient groups. Among the long-chain acylcarnitines, C14:2 and C16:1 levels were significantly increased in STEMI and NSTEMI. The ratio of free carnitine to short-chain or medium-chain acylcarnitines was significantly decreased in STEMI, NSTEMI and chest pain patients however a significant increase was observed in the ratio of carnitine to long-chain acylcarnitines in all the patient groups as compared to normal controls. In conclusion, alterations in carnitine and acylcarnitine levels in the blood of AMI patients indicate the possibility of impaired carnitine homeostasis in ischemic myocardium. The clinical implications of these findings for the risk screening or diagnosis and prognosis of AMI require additional follow-up studies on large number of patients. We also suggest that a dual-marker strategy using carnitine (longer plasma half-life) in combination with troponin (shorter plasma half-life) could be a more promising biomarker strategy in risk stratification of patients.  相似文献   

15.
Methylmalonic aciduria is a human autosomal recessive disorder of organic acid metabolism resulting from a functional defect in the activity of the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Based upon the homology of the human mutase locus with the mouse locus, we have chosen to disrupt the mouse mutase locus within the critical CoA binding domain using gene-targeting techniques to create a mouse model of methylmalonic aciduria. The phenotype of homozygous knock-out mice (mut-/-) is one of early neonatal lethality. Mice appear phenotypically normal at birth and are indistinguishable from littermates. By 15 h of age, they develop reduced movement and suckle less. This is followed by the development of abnormal breathing, and all of the mice with a null phenotype die by 24 h of age. Urinary levels of methylmalonic and methylcitric acids are grossly increased. Measurement of acylcarnitines in blood shows elevation of propionylcarnitine with no change in the levels of acetylcarnitine and free carnitine. Incorporation of [14C]propionate in primary fibroblast cultures from mut-/- mice is reduced to approximately 6% of normal level, whereas there is no detectable synthesis of mut mRNA in the liver. This is the first mouse model that recapitulates the key phenotypic features of mut0 methylmalonic aciduria.  相似文献   

16.
When the carnitine pool of fed rats was labelled with tritium, in non-recirculating perfusate of their liver 44% of acid-soluble 3H activity was identified as free carnitine and 47% as short-chain acylcarnitine. Of the latter component acetylcarnitine accounted for 30% and propionylcarnitine for 10% of total acid-soluble. In plasma the contribution of short-chain acylcarnitines to total carnitine in fed, fasted and diabetic rats was 15.6%, 43.1% and 48.0%, respectively. Recirculating perfusion of livers from the same animals revealed that livers from fed rats released short-chain acylcarnitines as much as 56.2% of total and this proportion did not increase further in the other two groups. At the same time, ketone bodies in the perfusate increased gradually in the fed, fasted and diabetic group, paralleling the plasma ketone levels. Although liver supplies the organism with carnitine the increment of plasma short-chain acylcarnitines seen in ketosis is not a result of some extra output by the liver.  相似文献   

17.
The concentrations of CoA in the livers of severely vitamin B(12)-deficient ewes were about 2.6 times those in pair-fed animals treated with vitamin B(12). When the feeding rates of the pair-fed animals were closely similar, the concentrations of methylmalonic acid in deficient livers were about twice those in vitamin B(12)-sufficient livers. The molar concentrations of CoA present were more than three times those of methylmalonic acid in both deficient and treated animals, and it is concluded that the elevated concentrations of CoA in the deficient livers were not primarily due to accumulation of methylmalonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

18.
To study how much the side chains of the corrin ring of vitamin B12 are involved in the physiological roles of the vitamin, five vitamin B12 analogues (cyanocobalamin-b-monocarboxylate, cyanocobalamin-d-monocarboxylate, cyanocobalamin-e-monocarboxylate, cyano-13-epicobalamin, and cyanocobalamin(c-lactam)) with alternations in the side chains were synthesized chemically and then administered orally and intravenously to vitamin B12-deficient rats. Male rats fed a vitamin B12-deficient diet for 11 wk developed a severe vitamin B12 deficiency with a high urinary methylmalonate excretion (223.8 ± 136.2 μmol/d) and ~97% (1.2±0.7ng/g tissue) lower hepatic vitamin B12 content. Oral and intravenous administration of cyanocobalamin-b-,-d-, and -e-monocarboxylates and cyano-13-epicobalamin could not improve the severe vitamin B12-deficient status of the rats, indicating that the b-, d-, and e-propionamide side chains of the corrin ring of vitamin B12 are important in the absorption, transport, and function of the vitamin in rats. Urinary methylmalonate excretion of the rats that were intravenously administered cyanocobalamin(c-lactam) increased twice as much as those of the other analogue-supplemented rats, suggesting that cyanocobalamin(c-lactam) act as a powerful Cbl-antagonist. The results also indicate that mammalian cells do not contain a system for synthesizing complete vitamin B12 from these analogues.  相似文献   

19.
Marginal deficiency of vitamin B-6 is common among segments of the population worldwide. Because pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) serves as a coenzyme in the metabolism of amino acids, carbohydrates, organic acids, and neurotransmitters, as well as in aspects of one-carbon metabolism, vitamin B-6 deficiency could have many effects. Healthy men and women (age: 20-40 y; n = 23) were fed a 2-day controlled, nutritionally adequate diet followed by a 28-day low-vitamin B-6 diet (<0.5 mg/d) to induce marginal deficiency, as reflected by a decline of plasma PLP from 52.6±14.1 (mean ± SD) to 21.5±4.6 nmol/L (P<0.0001) and increased cystathionine from 131±65 to 199±56 nmol/L (P<0.001). Fasting plasma samples obtained before and after vitamin B6 restriction were analyzed by 1H-NMR with and without filtration and by targeted quantitative analysis by mass spectrometry (MS). Multilevel partial least squares-discriminant analysis and S-plots of NMR spectra showed that NMR is effective in classifying samples according to vitamin B-6 status and identified discriminating features. NMR spectral features of selected metabolites indicated that vitamin B-6 restriction significantly increased the ratios of glutamine/glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate/glutamate (P<0.001) and tended to increase concentrations of acetate, pyruvate, and trimethylamine-N-oxide (adjusted P<0.05). Tandem MS showed significantly greater plasma proline after vitamin B-6 restriction (adjusted P<0.05), but there were no effects on the profile of 14 other amino acids and 45 acylcarnitines. These findings demonstrate that marginal vitamin B-6 deficiency has widespread metabolic perturbations and illustrate the utility of metabolomics in evaluating complex effects of altered vitamin B-6 intake.  相似文献   

20.
1-Carnitine was administered to fed rats and the changes in plasma beta-hydroxybutrate concentration and liver acid-insoluble acylcarnitine content were assessed. One hour following injection of carnitine in doses greater than 1 mumol/100 g of body weight there was a dose-dependent increase in liver acid-insoluble acylcarnitine content to levels comparable to those seen in fasting. These increased levels were maintained for a least 2 h following injection. During the period following carnitine administration there was no increase in ketogenesis as evidenced by plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate concentrations. Since acid-insoluble acylcarnitines represent the product of carnitine palmitoyltransferase A, the results are interpreted as contradictory to the theory that this enzyme is rate-limiting and regulatory for ketogenesis.  相似文献   

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