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AMINO ACID METABOLISM AND AMMONIA FORMATION IN BRAIN SLICES
Authors:H Weil-Malherbe  J Gordon
Institution:Section on Neurochemistry, Laboratory of Clinical Psychopharmacology, Division of Special Mental Health Research, IRP, MH, National Institute of Mental Health, St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington, D.C. 20032
Abstract:The formation of ammonia and changes in the contents of free amino acids have been investigated in slices of guinea pig cerebral cortex incubated under the following conditions: (1) aerobically in glucose-free saline; (2) aerobically in glucose-free saline containing 10 mM-bromofuroic acid, an inhibitor of glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2); (3) aerobically in saline containing 11-1 mM-glucose and (4) anaerobically in glucose-free saline. Ammonia was formed at a steady rate aerobically in glucose-free medium. The formation of ammonia was largely suppressed in the absence of oxygen or in the presence of glucose whereas the inhibitor of glutamate dehydrogenase produced about 50 per cent inhibition. Other inhibitors of glutamate dehydrogenase exerted a similar effect. Ammonia formation was also inhibited by some inhibitors of aminotransferases but not by others. Inhibition was generally more pronounced during the second and third hour of incubation. With the exception of glutamine which decreased slightly, the contents of all amino acids increased markedly during the anaerobic incubation. During aerobic incubation in a glucose-free medium, there was an almost complete disappearance of glutamic acid and GABA. Glutamine also decreased, but to a relatively smaller extent. The content of all other amino acids increased during aerobic incubation in glucose-free medium, although to a lesser extent than under anaerobic conditions. The greater increase of amino acids appearing anaerobically in comparison to the increase or decrease occurring under aerobic conditions corresponded closely to the greater amount of ammonia formed aerobically over that formed anaerobically. This finding is interpreted as indicating a similar degree of proteolysis under anaerobic and aerobic conditions; aerobically, the amino acids are partly metabolized with the concomitant liberation of ammonia. In glucose-supplemented medium, the content of glutamine was markedly increased. The content of glutamate and aspartate remained unchanged, whereas that of some other amino acids increased but to a lesser extent than in the absence of glucose. Proteolysis in the presence of glucose was estimated at about 65 per cent of that in its absence. In the presence of bromofuroate the rate of disappearance of glutamate was unchanged, but there was a larger increase in the content of aspartate and a smaller decrease of GABA and glutamine. Other changes did not differ significantly from those observed in the absence of bromofuroate. We conclude that the metabolism of amino acids in general and of glutamic acid in particular differs according to whether they are already present within the brain slice or are added to the incubation medium. Only the endogenous amino acids appear to be able to serve as precursors of ammonia and as substrates for energy production.
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