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1.
The aim of the present paper was to determine whether the release of glutamate from putative "glutamergic" terminals in the cerebellum is influenced by gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). In a group of preliminary experiments, we present biochemical evidence in favour of a neurotransmitter role of glutamate in the cerebellum: (1) endogenous glutamate was released from depolarized cerebellar synaptosomal preparations in a Ca2+-dependent away; (2) [14C]glutamate was synthesized from [14C]glutamine in cerebellar synaptosomes, and the newly synthesized [14C]glutamate was released released in a Ca2+-dependent way; (3) the elevation of cyclic GMP elicited by depolarization of cerebellar slices in the presence of Ca2+ was partly reversed by the glutamate antagonist glutamic acid diethyl ester, which probably prevented the interaction of endogenously released glutamate with postsynaptic receptors. GABA and muscimol at low concentrations (2--20 micrometers) potentiated the depolarization-induced release of D-[3H]aspartate (a glutamate analogue which labels the glutamate "reuptake pool") from cerebellar synaptosomes. The effect was concentration dependent and was largely prevented by two GABA antagonists, bicuculline and picrotoxin. The stimulation of D-[3H]aspartate release evoked by muscimol was linearly related to the logarithm of K+ concentration in the depolarizing medium. GABA did not affect the overall release of endogenous glutamate, but potentiated, in a picrotoxin-sensitive manner, the depolarization-evoked release of [14C]glutamate previously synthesized from [14C]glutamine. Since nerve endings are the major site of glutamate synthesis from glutamine, GABA and muscimol appear to exert their stimulatory effect at the level of "glutamergic" nerve terminals, probably after interacting with presynaptic GABA receptors. The possible functional significance of these findings is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

2.
1. The effect of fluoroacetate and fluorocitrate on the compartmentation of the glutamate-glutamine system was studied in brain slices with l-[U-(14)C]glutamate, l-[U-(14)C]aspartate, [1-(14)C]acetate and gamma-amino[1-(14)C]butyrate as precursors and in homogenates of brain tissue with [1-(14)C]acetate. The effect of fluoroacetate was also studied in vivo in mouse brain with [1-(14)C]acetate as precursor. 2. Fluoroacetate and fluorocitrate inhibit the labelling of glutamine from all precursors but affect the labelling of glutamate to a much lesser extent. This effect is not due to inhibition of glutamine synthetase. It is interpreted as being due to selective inhibition of the metabolism of a small pool of glutamate that preferentially labels glutamine.  相似文献   

3.
Glutamine release from astrocytes is an essential part of the glutamate-glutamine cycle in the brain. Uptake of glutamine into cultured rat astrocytes occurs by at least four different routes. In agreement with earlier studies, a significant contribution of amino acid transport systems ASC, A, L, and N was detected. It has not been determined whether these systems are also involved in glutamine efflux or whether specific efflux transporters exist. We show here that ASCT2, a variant of transport system ASC, is strongly expressed in rat astroglia-rich primary cultures but not in neuron-rich primary cultures. The amino acid sequence of rat astroglial ASCT2 is 83% identical to that of mouse ASCT2. In Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing rat ASCT2, we observed high-affinity uptake of [U-14C]glutamine (Km = 70 microM) that was Na(+)-dependent, concentrative, and unaffected by membrane depolarization. When oocytes were preloaded with [U-14C]glutamine, no glutamine efflux was detected in the absence of extracellular amino acids. Neither lowering intracellular pH nor raising the temperature elicited efflux. However, addition of 0.1 mM unlabeled alanine, serine, cysteine, threonine, glutamine, or leucine to the extracellular solution resulted in a rapid release of glutamine from the ASCT2-expressing oocytes. Amino acids that are not recognized as substrates by ASCT2 were ineffective in this role. Extracellular glutamate stimulated glutamine release weakly at pH 7.5 but was more effective on lowering pH to 5.5, consistent with the pH dependence of ASCT2 affinity for glutamate. Our findings suggest a significant role of ASCT2 in glutamine efflux from astrocytes by obligatory exchange with extracellular amino acids. However, the relative contribution of this pathway to glutamine release from cells in vivo or in vitro remains to be determined.  相似文献   

4.
Using cerebellar, neuron-enriched primary cultures, we have studied the glutamate receptor subtypes coupled to neurotransmitter amino acid release. Acute exposure of the cultures to micromolar concentrations of kainate and quisqualate stimulated D-[3H]aspartate release, whereas N-methyl-D-aspartate, as well as dihydrokainic acid, were ineffective. The effect of kainic acid was concentration dependent in the concentration range of 20-100 microM. Quisqualic acid was effective at lower concentrations, with maximal releasing activity at about 50 microM. Kainate and dihydrokainate (20-100 microM) inhibited the initial rate of D-[3H]aspartate uptake into cultured granule cells, whereas quisqualate and N-methyl-DL-aspartate were ineffective. D-[3H]Aspartate uptake into confluent cerebellar astrocyte cultures was not affected by kainic acid. The stimulatory effect of kainic acid on D-[3H]aspartate release was Na+ independent, and partly Ca2+ dependent; the effect of quisqualate was Na+ and Ca2+ independent. Kynurenic acid (50-200 microM) and, to a lesser extent, 2,3-cis-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (100-200 microM) antagonized the stimulatory effect of kainate but not that of quisqualate. Kainic and quisqualic acid (20-100 microM) also stimulated gamma-[3H]-aminobutyric acid release from cerebellar cultures, and kynurenic acid antagonized the effect of kainate but not that of quisqualate. In conclusion, kainic acid and quisqualic acid appear to activate two different excitatory amino acid receptor subtypes, both coupled to neurotransmitter amino acid release. Moreover, kainate inhibits D-[3H]aspartate neuronal uptake by interfering with the acidic amino acid high-affinity transport system.  相似文献   

5.
The metabolism of [U-(13)C]lactate (1 mM) in the presence of unlabeled glucose (2.5 mM) was investigated in glutamatergic cerebellar granule cells, cerebellar astrocytes, and corresponding co-cultures. It was evident that lactate is primarily a neuronal substrate and that lactate produced glycolytically from glucose in astrocytes serves as a substrate in neurons. Alanine was highly enriched with (13)C in the neurons, whereas this was not the case in the astrocytes. Moreover, the cellular content and the amount of alanine released into the medium were higher in neurons than astrocytes. On incubation of the different cell types in medium containing alanine (1 mM), the astrocytes exhibited the highest level of accumulation. Altogether, these results indicate a preferential synthesis and release of alanine in glutamatergic neurons and uptake in cerebellar astrocytes. A new functional role of alanine may be suggested as a carrier of nitrogen from glutamatergic neurons to astrocytes, a transport that may operate to provide ammonia for glutamine synthesis in astrocytes and dispose of ammonia generated by the glutaminase reaction in glutamatergic neurons. Hence, a model of a glutamate-glutamine/lactate-alanine shuttle is presented. To elucidate if this hypothesis is compatible with the pattern of alanine metabolism observed in the astrocytes and neurons from cerebellum, the cells were incubated in a medium containing [(15)N]alanine (1 mM) and [5-(15)N]glutamine (0.5 mM), respectively. Additionally, neurons were incubated with [U-(13)C]glutamine to estimate the magnitude of glutamine conversion to glutamate. Alanine was labeled from [5-(15)N]glutamine to 3.3% and [U-(13)C]glutamate generated from [U-(13)C]glutamine was labeled to 16%. In spite of the modest labeling in alanine, it is clear that nitrogen from ammonia is transferred to alanine via transamination with glutamate formed by reductive amination of alpha-ketoglutarate. With regard to the astrocytic part of the shuttle, glutamine was labeled to 22% in one nitrogen atom whereas 3.2% was labeled in two when astrocytes were incubated in [(15)N]alanine. Moreover, in co-cultures, [U-(13)C]alanine labeled glutamate and glutamine equally, whereas [U-(13)C]lactate preferentially labeled glutamate. Altogether, these results support the role proposed above of alanine as a possible ammonia nitrogen carrier between glutamatergic neurons and surrounding astrocytes and they show that lactate is preferentially metabolized in neurons and alanine in astrocytes.  相似文献   

6.
Release of endogenous amino acids labelled via D-[U-14C]glucose was compared with that of several exogenous labelled amino acids using slices of guinea pig cerebral cortex. Electrical field stimulation evoked a selective release of endogenous [14C]glutamate, [14C]aspartate, and gamma-amino[14C]butyrate (14C-labelled GABA). The selectivity of release correlated well with 14C incorporation into endogenous amino acids. Calculations of the fraction of the tissue radioactivity released indicated that the selectivity was not an artifact due to differential incorporation. Because glucose in mammalian brain is metabolized almost entirely by the so-called 'large compartment', it is tentatively concluded that the releasable 'transmitter pool' of glutamate, aspartate, and GABA is located in this 'large compartment'.  相似文献   

7.
The release of [3H]GABA formed from [3H]glutamate in rat hippocampal slices   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
to compare the storage and release of endogenous GABA, of [3H]GABA formed endogenously from glutamate, and of exogenous [14C]GABA, hippocampal slices were incubated with 5 microCi/ml [3,4-3H]1-glutamate and 0.5 microCi/ml [U-14C]GABA and then were superfused in the presence or absence of Ca+ with either 50 mM K+ or 50 microM veratridine. Endogenous GABA was determined by high performance liquid chromatography which separated labeled GABA from its precursors and metabolites. Exogenous [14C]GABA content of the slices declined spontaneously while endogenous GABA and endogenously formed [3H]GABA stayed constant over a 48 min period. In the presence of Ca+ 50 mM K+ and in the presence or absence of Ca2+ veratridine released exogenous [14C]GABA more rapidly than endogenous or endogenously formed [3H]GABA, the release of the latter two occurring always in parallel. The initial specific activity of released exogenous [14C]GABA was three times, while that of endogenously formed [3H]GABA was only 50% higher than that in the slices. There was an excess of endogenous GABA content following superfusion with 50 mM K+ and Ca2+, which did not occur in the absence of Ca2+ or after veratridine. The observation that endogenous GABA and [3H]GABA formed endogenously from glutamate are stored and released in parallel but differently from exogenous labelled GABA, suggests that exogenous [3H] glutamate can enter a glutamate pool that normally serves as precursor of GABA.  相似文献   

8.
1. (14)C from [1-(14)C]glucose injected intraperitoneally into mice is incorporated into glutamate, aspartate and glutamine in the brain to a much greater extent than (14)C from [2-(14)C]glucose. This difference for [1-(14)C]glucose and [2-(14)C]glucose increases with time. The amount of (14)C in C-1 of glutamate increases steadily with time with both precursors. It is suggested that a large part of the glutamate and aspartate pools in brain are in close contact with intermediates of a fast-turning tricarboxylic acid cycle. 2. (14)C from [1-(14)C]acetate and [2-(14)C]acetate is incorporated to a much larger extent into glutamine than into glutamate. An examination of the time-course of (14)C incorporated into glutamine and glutamate reveals that glutamine is not formed from the glutamate pool, labelled extensively by glucose, but from a small glutamate pool. This small glutamate pool is not derived from an intermediate of a fast-turning tricarboxylic acid cycle. 3. It is proposed that two different tricarboxylic acid cycles exist in brain.  相似文献   

9.
Hepatocyte heterogeneity in glutamate uptake by isolated perfused rat liver   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Glutamate is simultaneously taken up and released by perfused rat liver, as shown by 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate in the presence of a net glutamate release by the liver, turning to a net glutamate uptake at portal glutamate concentrations above 0.3 mM. 14CO2 production from portal [1-14C]glutamate is decreased by about 60% in the presence of ammonium ions. This effect is not observed during inhibition of glutamine synthetase by methionine sulfoximine. 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate is not influenced by glutamine. Also, when glutamate accumulates intracellularly during the metabolism of glutamine (added at high concentrations, 5 mM), 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate is not affected. If labeled glutamate is generated intracellularly from added [U-14C]proline, stimulation of glutamine synthesis by ammonium ions did not affect 14CO2 production from [U-14C]proline. After induction of a perivenous liver cell necrosis by CCL4, i.e. conditions associated with an almost complete loss of perivenous glutamine synthesis but no effect on periportal urea synthesis, 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate is decreased by about 70%. The results are explained by hepatocyte heterogeneity in glutamate metabolism and indicate a predominant uptake of glutamate (that reaches the liver by the vena portae) by the small perivenous population of glutamine-synthesizing hepatocytes, whereas glutamate production from glutamine or proline is predominantly periportal. In view of the size of the glutamine synthetase-containing hepatocyte pool [Gebhardt, R. and Mecke, D. (1983) EMBO J. 2, 567-570], glutamate transport capacity of these hepatocytes would be about 20-fold higher as compared to other hepatocytes.  相似文献   

10.
Glutamate exists in a vesicular as well as a cytoplasmic pool and is metabolically closely related to the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Glutamate released during neuronal activity is most likely to a large extent accumulated by astrocytes surrounding the synapse. A compensatory flux from astrocytes to neurons of suitable precursors is obligatory as neurons are incapable of performing a net synthesis of glutamate from glucose. Glutamine appears to play a major role in this context. Employing cultured cerebellar granule cells, as a model system for glutamatergic neurons, details of the biosynthetic machinery have been investigated during depolarizing conditions inducing vesicular release. [U-13C]Glucose and [U-13C]glutamine were used as labeled precursors for monitoring metabolic pathways by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) technologies. To characterize release mechanisms and influence of glutamate transporters on maintenance of homeostasis in the glutamatergic synapse, a quantification was performed by HPLC analysis of the amounts of glutamate and aspartate released in response to depolarization by potassium (55 mM) in the absence and presence of DL-threo-beta-benzyloxyaspartate (TBOA) and in response to L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (t-2,4-PDC), a substrate for the glutamate transporter. Based on labeling patterns of glutamate the biosynthesis of the intracellular pool of glutamate from glutamine was found to involve the TCA cycle to a considerable extent (approximately 50%). Due to the mitochondrial localization of PAG this is unlikely only to reflect amino acid exchange via the cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase reaction. The involvement of the TCA cycle was significantly lower in the synthesis of the released vesicular pool of glutamate. However, in the presence of TBOA, inhibiting glutamate uptake, the difference between the intracellular and the vesicular pool with regard to the extent of involvement of the TCA cycle in glutamate synthesis from glutamine was eliminated. Surprisingly, the intracellular pool of glutamate was decreased after repetitive release from the vesicular pool in the presence of TBOA indicating that neuronal reuptake of released glutamate is involved in the maintenance of the neurotransmitter pool and that 0.5 mM glutamine exogenously supplied is inadequate to sustain this pool.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: The effect of anoxia and ischemia on the release of amino acid transmitters from cerebellar slices induced by veratridine or high [K+] was studied. Synaptic specificity was tested by examining the tetradotoxin (TTX)-sensitive and the Ca2+-dependent components of stimulated release. Evoked release of endogenous amino acids was investigated in addition to more detailed studies on the stimulated efflux of preloaded [14C]GABA and d -[3H]aspartate (a metabolically more stable anologue of acidic amino acids).[14C]GABA release evoked by either method of stimulation was unaffected by periods of up to 35 min of anoxia and declined moderately by 45 min. In contrast, induced release of d -[3H]Asp increased markedly during anoxia to a peak at about 25 min, followed by a decline when anoxia was prolonged to 45 min. Evidence was obtained that the increased evoked efflux of d -[3H]Asp from anoxic slices was not due to impaired reuptake of the released amino acid and that it was completely reversible by reoxygenation of the slices. Results of experiments examining the evoked release of endogenous amino acids in anoxia were consistent with those obtained with the exogenous amino acids. Only 4 of the 10 endogenous amino acids studied exhibited TTX-sensitive veratridine-induced release under aerobic conditions (glutamate, aspartate, GABA, and glycine). Anoxia for 25 min did not affect the stimulated efflux of these amino acids with the exception of glutamate, which showed a significant increase. Compared with anoxia, effects of ischemia on synaptic function appeared to be more severe. Veratridine-evoked release of [14C]GABA was already depressed by 10 min and that of d -[3H]Asp showed a modest elevation only at 5 min. Stimulated release of d -Asp and labelled GABA declined progressively after 5 min. These findings were compared with changes in tissue ATP concentrations and histology. The latter studies indicated that in anoxia the earliest alterations are detectable in glia and that nerve terminals were the structures by far the most resistant to anoxic damage. The results thus indicated that evoked release of amino acid transmitters in the cerebellum is compromised only by prolonged anoxia in vitro. In addition, it would appear that the stimulated release of glutamate is selectively accentuated during anoxia. This effect may have a bearing on some hypoxic behavioral changes and, perhaps, also on the well-known selective vulnerability of certain neurons during hypoxia.  相似文献   

12.
Intact avian liver mitochondria were shown to synthesize glutamine from glutamate in the absence of exogenous ATP and ammonia. With L-[U-14C]glutamate as the substrate, there was an approximate 1:1 stoichiometry between glutamate deaminated (as measured by the release of 14CO2 due to alpha-keto-[14C]glutarate oxidation) and glutamate amidated. With L-[15N]glutamate as the substrate, the isolated glutamine was shown by low and high resolution mass spectrometry of its phenylisothiocyanate derivative to contain 15N in both the alpha-amino and amide groups. Thus, for each mole of glutamate taken up, approximately 0.5 mol is deaminated and the other 0.5 mol serves as a substrate for glutamine synthetase previously localized in these mitochondria (Vorhaben, J. E., and Campbell, J. W. (1972) J. Biol. Chem. 247,2763). The permeability of L-glutamine to intact avian liver mitochondria was studied by a rapid centrifugation technique. Efflux as well as influx of L-glutamine were both rapid and appeared to occur by a passive, energy-independent process. These results indicate that the mitochondrial glutamine synthetase present in uricotelic species represents the primary ammonia detoxication reaction in that ammonia released intramitochondrially during amino acid catabolism is converted to glutamine for efflux to the cytosol where it may serve as a substrate for purine (uric acid) biosynthesis.  相似文献   

13.
Spontaneous and electrically evoked release of exogenous labelled amino acids and endogenous amino acids labelled from D-[U-14C]glucose were compared in control and Ca2+-free medium using guinea pig cerebral cortex slices. Spontaneous release of all labelled amino acids, except that of endogenous 14C-labelled threonine-serine-glutamine (unseparated) and exogenous [14C]aspartate, was doubled in Ca2+-free medium. The major portion of the electrically evoked release of endogenous [14C]glutamate, [14C]aspartate, gamma-amino[14C]butyrate (14C-labelled GABA) and exogenous 3H-labelled GABA was Ca2+-inpendent. More than half of the evoked release of the other labelled amino acids was Ca2+-independent. As the pattern of Ca2+-dependence of the evoked release concurred with the selectivity of the evoked release for endogenous [14C]-glutamate, [14C]aspartate, and 14C-labelled GABA, it was concluded that these labelled amino acids were probably released from the amino acid 'transmitter pool'.  相似文献   

14.
Awake, unrestrained, and behaviourally normal animals with superfusion cannulae implanted over the sensorimotor cortex were used in a study of the capacity of infused [U-14C]glutamine for labelling glutamate and other amino acids released by depolarising stimuli. A spontaneous background release of [14C]glutamate was detected. This was increased by tityustoxin (1 microM). The specific radioactivity of glutamate increased eightfold during the evoked-release period. [14C]Aspartate was also detected and showed increased release, but not increased specific labelling, in response to depolarisation. Evoked gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) release occurred but only small amounts of [14C]GABA were detected. Glutamine showed increased rates of uptake to the sensorimotor cortex during stimulation periods, suggesting an accelerated breakdown via glutaminase.  相似文献   

15.
Glucose and glutamine metabolism in rat thymocytes.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1  
The metabolism of glucose and glutamine in freshly prepared resting and concanavalin A-stimulated rat thymocytes was studied. Concanavalin A addition enhanced uptake of both glucose and glutamine and led to an increase in oxidative degradation of both substrates to CO2. With variously labelled [14C]glucose, it was shown that the pathways of glucose dissimilation were equally stimulated by the mitogen. A disproportionately large percentage of the extra glucose taken up was converted into lactate, but concanavalin A also caused an increase in the oxidation of pyruvate as judged by the enhanced release of 14CO2 from [2-14C]-, [3,4-14C]- and [6-14C]-glucose. Addition of glutamine did not affect glucose metabolism. The major end products of glutamine metabolism by resting and mitogen-stimulated rat thymocytes were glutamate, aspartate, CO2 and NH3. Virtually no lactate was formed from glutamine. Concanavalin A enhanced the formation of all end products except glutamate, indicating that more glutamine was metabolized beyond the stage of glutamate in the mitogen-activated cells. Addition of glucose caused a significant decrease in the rates of glutamine utilization and conversion into aspartate and CO2 in the absence and in the presence of concanavalin A. In the presence of glucose, almost all nitrogen of the metabolized glutamine was accounted for as NH3 released via the glutaminase and/or glutamate dehydrogenase reactions. In the absence of glucose, part (18%) of the glutamine nitrogen was metabolized by the resting and to a larger extent (38%) by the mitogen-stimulated thymocytes via a transaminase or amidotransferase reaction.  相似文献   

16.
Presynaptic actions of kainic acid have been tested on uptake and release mechanisms in synaptosome-enriched preparations from rat hippocampus and goldfish brain. Kainic acid increased in a Ca2+-dependent way the basal release of endogenous glutamate and aspartate from both synaptosomal preparations, with the maximum effect (40-80%) being reached at the highest concentration tested (1 mM). In addition, kainic acid potentiated, in an additive or synergic way, the release of excitatory amino acids stimulated by high K+ concentrations. Kainic acid at 1 mM showed a completely opposite effect on the release of exogenously accumulated D-[3H]aspartate. The drug, in fact, caused a marked inhibition of both the basal and the high K+-stimulated release. Kainic acid at 0.1 mM had no clear-cut effect, whereas at 0.01 mM it caused a small stimulation of the basal release. The present results suggest that kainic acid differentially affects two neurotransmitter pools that are not readily miscible in the synaptic terminals. The release from an endogenous, possibly vesiculate, pool of excitatory amino acids is stimulated, whereas the release from an exogenously accumulated, possibly cytoplasmic and carrier-mediated, pool is inhibited or slightly stimulated, depending on the external concentration of kainic acid. Kainic acid, in addition, strongly inhibits the high-affinity uptake of L-glutamate and D-aspartate in synaptic terminals. All these effects appear specific for excitatory amino acids, making it likely that they are mediated through specific recognition sites present on the membranes of glutamatergic and aspartatergic terminals. The relevance of the present findings to the mechanism of excitotoxicity of kainic acid is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
1. The metabolic fate of infused [1-14C]glutamate was studied in perfused rat liver. The 14C label taken up by the liver was recovered to 85 +/- 2% as 14CO2 and [14C]glutamine. Whereas 14CO2 production accounted for about 70% of the [1-14C]glutamate taken up under conditions of low endogenous rates of glutamine synthesis, stepwise stimulation of glutamine synthesis by NH4Cl increased 14C incorporation into glutamine at the expense of 14CO2 production. Extrapolation to maximal rates of hepatic glutamine synthesis yielded an about 100% utilization of vascular glutamate taken up by the liver for glutamine synthesis. This was observed in both, antegrade and retrograde perfusions and suggests an almost exclusive uptake of glutamate into perivenous glutamine-synthetase-containing hepatocytes. 2. Glutamate was simultaneously taken up and released from perfused rat liver. At a near-physiological influent glutamate concentration (0.1 mM), the rates of unidirectional glutamate influx and efflux were similar (about 100 and 120 nmol g-1 min-1, respectively). 3. During infusion of [1-14C]oxoglutarate (50 microM), addition of glutamate (2 mM) did not affect hepatic uptake of [1-14C]oxoglutarate. However, it increased labeled glutamate release from the liver about 10-fold (from 9 +/- 2 to 86 +/- 20 nmol g-1 min-1; n = 4), whereas 14CO2 production from labeled oxoglutarate decreased by about 40%. This suggests not only different mechanisms of oxoglutarate and glutamate transport across the plasma membrane, but also points to a glutamate/glutamate exchange. 4. Oxoglutarate was recently shown to be taken up almost exclusively by perivenous glutamine-synthetase-containing hepatocytes [Stoll, B & H?ussinger, D. (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 181, 709-716] and [1-14C]oxoglutarate (9 microM) was used to label selectively the intracellular glutamate pool in this perivenous cell population. The specific radioactivity of this intracellular (perivenous) glutamate pool was assessed by measuring the specific radioactivity of newly synthesized glutamine which is continuously released from these cells into the perfusate. Comparison of the specific radioactivities of glutamine and glutamate released from perivenous cells indicates that about 60% of total glutamate release from the liver is derived from the perivenous glutamine-synthetase-containing cell population. Following addition of unlabeled glutamate (0.1 mM), unidirectional glutamate efflux from perivenous cells increased from about 30 to 80 nmol g-1 min-1, whereas glutamate efflux from non-perivenous (presumably periportal) hepatocytes remained largely unaltered (i.e. 20-30 nmol g-1 min-1). 5. It is concluded that, in the intact liver, vascular glutamate is almost exclusively taken up by the small perivenous hepatocyte population containing glutamine synthetase.  相似文献   

18.
The authors compared, in rat brain cortex slices, the oxidation of labelled glucose and acetate and the conversion of these precursors into amino acids during incubation in control salt-glucose medium and in medium with 47 mM K+, with the aim of determining with which of the two determinable tricarboxylate cycles raised oxygen consumption is associated in the presence of excess K+. Under the experimental conditions it was found that from U-[14C]-glucose more than double the amount of [14C]-CO2 was formed and that the rate of [14C] incorportation into the amino acids was likewise roughly doubled. This is indicative of activation of processes in the tricarboxylate cycle associated with the large glutamate pool. Incorporation from 1-[14C]-acetate into the total amino acids was not affected. Specific activity in glutamate and asparate was more than doubled, while glutamine specific activity fell to less than half. [14C]-CO2 production fell to 65%. This shows that the tricarboxylate cycle associated with the small glutamate pool, which is probably localized in the glia cells, did not participate in raised oxygen consumption in the presence of excess K+.  相似文献   

19.
The role of glutamine and alanine transport in the recycling of neurotransmitter glutamate was investigated in Guinea pig brain cortical tissue slices and prisms, and in cultured neuroblastoma and astrocyte cell lines. The ability of exogenous (2 mm) glutamine to displace 13C label supplied as [3-13C]pyruvate, [2-13C]acetate, l-[3-13C]lactate, or d-[1-13C]glucose was investigated using NMR spectroscopy. Glutamine transport was inhibited in slices under quiescent or depolarising conditions using histidine, which shares most transport routes with glutamine, or 2-(methylamino)isobutyric acid (MeAIB), a specific inhibitor of the neuronal system A. Glutamine mainly entered a large, slow turnover pool, probably located in neurons, which did not interact with the glutamate/glutamine neurotransmitter cycle. This uptake was inhibited by MeAIB. When [1-13C]glucose was used as substrate, glutamate/glutamine cycle turnover was inhibited by histidine but not MeAIB, suggesting that neuronal system A may not play a prominent role in neurotransmitter cycling. When transport was blocked by histidine under depolarising conditions, neurotransmitter pools were depleted, showing that glutamine transport is essential for maintenance of glutamate, GABA and alanine pools. Alanine labelling and release were decreased by histidine, showing that alanine was released from neurons and returned to astrocytes. The resultant implications for metabolic compartmentation and regulation of metabolism by transport processes are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract— Hemisections of toad brains, when incubated in a physiological medium containing no glutamine. released considerable amounts of this amino acid into the medium. When glutamine was included in the medium at a concentration of 0.2 mm the net efflux from the tissue was reduced but not totally prevented. Although there was no net uptake of glutamine, the tissue did accumulate [U-14C]glu-tamine and some of this labelled glutamine was rapidly metabolized to glutamate, GABA and aspartate. The precursor-product relationship for the metabolism of glutamine to glutamate differed from the classic single compartment model in that the specific radioactivity of glutamate rose very quickly to approx one-tenth that of glutamine, but increased slowly thereafter. These data suggest that the [14C]glutamine was taken up into two metabolically distinct compartments and/or that some of the [14C]glutamine was converted to [14C]glutamate during the uptake process. The uptake of [14C]glutamine was diminished when the tissue was incubated in a non-oxygenated medium or when Na+ was omitted (substituted with sucrose) and K+ was concomitantly elevated. However, on a relative basis, the incorporation of radioactivity into glutamate and GABA was increased by these incubation conditions. The metabolism of glutamine to aspartate was greatly depressed when the tissue was not oxygenated. The glutamate formed from [U-14C]glutamine taken up by the tissue was converted to GABA at a faster rate than was glutamate derived from [U-14C]glucose. [U-14C]gly-cerol or exogenous [U-14C]glutamate. This suggests that glutamine was metabolized to GABA selectively; i.e. on a relative basis, glutamine served as a better source of carbon for the synthesis of GABA than did glucose, glycerol or exogenous glutamate. When the brain hemisections were incubated in the normal physiological medium with or without glutamine. there was very little efflux of glutamate, GABA or aspartate from the tissue. However when NaCl was omitted from the medium (substituted with sucrose) and K+ was elevated to 29 miu. a marked efflux of these three amino acids into the medium did occur, and over a period of 160min, the content of each amino acid in the tissue was depleted considerably. When glutamine (0.2 mm ) was included in the Na+ deficient-high K.+ medium, the average amount of glutamate, GABA and aspartate in the tissue plus the medium was greater than when glutamine was not included in the medium. Such data indicate that CNS tissues can utilize glutamine for a net synthesis of glutamate, GABA and aspartate. The results of this study provide further evidence in support of the concept that the functional (transmitter) pools of glutamate and GABA are maintained and regulated in part via biosynthesis from glutamine. One specific mechanism instrumental in regulating the content of glutamate in nerve terminals may be a process of glutamine uptake coupled to deamidation.  相似文献   

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