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1.
2-Oxoglutarate (-ketoglutarate) is transported into synaptosomal and synaptoneurosomal preparations by a Na+-dependent, high-affinity process that exhibits complex kinetics, and is differentially modulated by glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, malate, and a soluble, heat-labile substance of high molecular weight present in rat brain extracts. Glutamate and aspartate generally inhibit 2-oxoglutarate uptake, but under certain conditions may increase uptake. Glutamine generally increases 2-oxoglutarate uptake, but under certain conditions may inhibit uptake. One interpretation of our results is that 2-oxoglutarate uptake is mediated primarily by a transporter that exhibits negative cooperativity and possesses three regulatory sites that differentially modulate substrate affinity, Vmax, and negative cooperativity. Glutamate, aspartate, malate, and 2-oxoglutarate itself may interact with a site that reduces substrate affinity; whereas glutamine, and possibly glutamate and aspartate, appear to interact with another site that increases Vmax. A putative regulatory protein appears to abolish negative cooperativity and increases substrate affinity in the absence of glutamine. Based on the evidence that glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons depend on astrocytes to supply precursors to replenish their neurotransmitter and tricarboxylic acid cycle pools, the uptake of 2-oxoglutarate, presumably into synaptic terminals, may reflect a role for this metabolite in replenishing the transmitter and tricarboxylic acid pools, and a role for the transporter as a site at which these pools are regulated.Abbreviations used AAT aspartate aminotransferase - glu glutamate - gln glutamine - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - LDS low-density synaptosomes - OAA oxaloacetate - 2-OG 2-oxoglutarate (-ketoglutarate) - PC pyruvate carboxylase - PDH pyruvate dehydrogenase - TCA tricarboxylic acid Special issue dedicated to Dr. Claude Baxter.  相似文献   

2.
Glutamine transport into rat brain synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondria has been monitored by the uptake of [3H]glutamine and by mitochondrial swelling. The concentration of glutamate in brain mitochondria is calculated to be high, 5–10 mM, indicating that phosphate activated glutaminase localized inside the mitochondria is likely to be dormant and the glutamine taken up not hydrolyzed. The uptake of [3H]glutamine is largely stereospecific. It is inhibited by glutamate, asparagine, aspartate, 2-oxoglutarate and succinate. Glutamate inhibits this uptake into synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondria by 95 and 85%, respectively. The inhibition by glutamate, asparagine, aspartate and succinate can be explained by binding to an inhibitory site whereas the inhibition by 2-oxoglutarate is counteracted by aminooxyacetic acid, which indicates that it is dependent on transamination. The glutamine-induced swelling, a measure of a very low affinity uptake, is inhibited by glutamate at a glutamine concentration of 100 mM, but this inhibition is abolished when the glutamine concentration is raised to 200 mM. This suggests that the very low affinity glutamine uptake is competitively inhibited by glutamate. Furthermore, glutamine-induced swelling is inhibited by 2-oxoglutarate, succinate and malate, similarly to that of the [3H]glutamine uptake. The properties of the mitochondrial glutamine transport are not identical with those of a recently purified renal glutamine carrier.  相似文献   

3.
The role of glial cells for the inactivation and synthesis of precursors for amino acid transmitters was studied in the brains of anesthetized rats in vivo using the microdialysis technique. The dialysis probes were inserted stereotactically into each neostriatum. One neostriatum was treated with the gliotoxin fluorocitrate, whereas the contralateral side served as a control. The basal efflux of amino acids, reflecting the extracellular level, was measured as well as the efflux during depolarization with 100 mM K+ in the dialysis stream. The potassium-evoked efflux of transmitter amino acids was calcium dependent and thus considered to reflect release from the transmitter pool. gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate release from the treated side was higher than the control value during the first 2-3 h, a result indicating an important role of glial cells in the inactivation of released transmitter. After 6-7 h with fluorocitrate, the release of glutamate was lower than the control value, a result indicating an important role of glial cells in the synthesis of precursors for the releasable pool of glutamate. The role of glutamine for the production of transmitter glutamate and GABA in vivo was further investigated by inhibiting glutamine synthetase with intrastriatally administered methionine sulfoximine. The release of gluatamate into the dialysis probe decreased to 54% of the control value, whereas the release of GABA decreased to 22% of the control value, a result indicating that glutamine may be more important for transmitter GABA than for transmitter glutamate.  相似文献   

4.
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to evaluate the metabolism of [15N]glutamine in isolated rat brain synaptosomes. In the presence of 0.5 mM glutamine, synaptosomes accumulated this amino acid to a level of 25-35 nmol/mg protein at an initial rate greater than 9 nmol/min/mg of protein. The metabolism of [15N]glutamine generated 15N-labelled glutamate, aspartate, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). An efflux of both [15N]glutamate and [15N]aspartate from synaptosomes to the medium was observed. Enrichment of 15N in alanine could not be detected because of a limited pool size. Elimination of glucose from the incubation medium substantially increased the rate and amount of [15N]aspartate formed. It is concluded that: (1) With 0.5 mM external glutamine, the glutaminase reaction, and not glutamine transport, determines the rate of metabolism of this amino acid. (2) The primary route of glutamine catabolism involves aspartate aminotransferase which generates 2-oxoglutarate, a substrate for the tricarboxylic acid cycle. This reaction is greatly accelerated by the omission of glucose. (3) Glutamine has preferred access to a population of synaptosomes or to a synaptosomal compartment that generates GABA. (4) Synaptosomes maintain a constant internal level of glutamate plus aspartate of about 70-80 nmol/mg protein. As these amino acids are produced from glutamine in excess of this value, they are released into the medium. Hence synaptosomal glutamine and glutamate metabolism are tightly regulated in an interrelated manner.  相似文献   

5.
Brain levels of y-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate, activities of glutamate decarboxylase GABA-transaminase plus succinic semiaidehyde dehydrogenase and blood levels of glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate were determined in normal, thiamine-deprived, oxythiamine-treated and pyrithiamine-treated rats. Brain GABA levels were significantly reduced in thiamine-deprived and pyrithiamine-treated rats, but the activities of the enzymes of the GABA shunt pathway were not affected. Brain levels of glutamate were decreased and of 2-oxoglutarate increased in all three types of deficiency. This was associated with similar decreases in glutamate and increases in 2-oxoglutarate in the blood in all three deficient groups. Intraventricular injections of 2-[U-14C] oxoglutarate into the brain in these four groups of rats resulted in some significant differences in distribution of 14C in various TCA-pathway intermediates and satellite compounds in the brain. Increases in 14C-label were observed for glutamine and 2-oxoglutarate in all three deficient groups as compared to controls. The 14C content of succinate, fumarate and aspartate was decreased in the thiamine deprived and PTh-treated groups and [14C]glutamate was decreased in all three deficient groups. The 14C content of GABA was not significantly affected.  相似文献   

6.
REGIONAL AND SUBCELLULAR DISTRIBUTION OF AMINOTRANSFERASES IN RAT BRAIN   总被引:6,自引:6,他引:0  
Abstract— Aminotransferase activity was measured in various areas of the nervous system of the rat (cortical grey matter, midbrain, corpus callosum, spinal cord and sciatic nerve) and in subcellular fractions of rat brain (nuclei, mitochondria and cytosol). Activity was low or absent in the sciatic nerve relative to that in the other areas, with the exception of incubation of glutamate with oxaloacetate (25 per cent of the activity found in brain) and of asparagine with 2-oxoglutarate (65 per cent of the activity found in brain). The distribution of enzymic activity was not homogeneous; alanine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase was highest in cortical grey matter; leucine- and GABA-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferases were highest in midbrain. Incubation of phenylalanine or tyrosine with 2-oxoglutarate gave similar activities in grey matter and midbrain. Activity generally was higher in the grey matter than in corpus callosum or spinal cord. However, incubations of methionine with 2-oxoglutarate, or glutamine with glyoxylate, gave similar activities in the three areas studied from the brain, whereas incubations of glutamate with glyoxylate gave highest activity in the corpus callosum. Only incubations of asparagine with 2-oxoglutarate, and glutamate with glyoxylate, gave significant activity in the nuclear subcellular fraction. Aminotransferase activity of phenylalanine, tyrosine or GABA with 2-oxoglutarate, or ornithine or glutamine with glyoxylate, was localized to mitochondria. The remaining reactions studied (glutamate with oxaloacetate; leucine, alanine, methionine or asparagine with 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate with glyoxylate) demonstrated activity in both the mitochondrial fraction and the soluble supernatant fraction.  相似文献   

7.
(1) The metabolism of glucose and amino acids in vitro was compared in the rat cerebral cortex and the optic and vertical lobes of the octopus brain. (2) Specific activities and pool sizes of the five amino acids, glutamate, aspartate, glutamine, alanine and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), were determined in octopus and rat brain slices after 2 hr incubation with 10 mm -[U-14C]glucose, 10 mm -L-[U-14C]glutamate, and 10mm -L-[U-14C]glutamate with added 10 mM-glucose. Amino acid pool sizes were similar in rat and octopus brain, with the exception of alanine, which was higher in the octopus. Generally specific activities were from four- to 20-fold higher in rat brain. With [U-14C]glucose as substrate, specific activities of GABA and glutamate were highest in rat; those of alanine and glutamine highest in octopus brain. With L-[U-14C]glutamate the specific activities of GABA and aspartate were highest in rat, that of aspartate highest and GABA lowest in octopus. The addition of glucose to L-[U-14C]glutamate as substrate had little effect on the specific activities of any of the amino acids. (3) The uptake of some amino acids was determined by incubation with [U-14C]amino acids for 2 hr, and 14CO2 formation was also measured. The amount of label taken up by octopus was uniformly 20-25 per cent of that found for rat brain. The amount of 14CO2, however, differed according to the amino acid. Four times as much 14CO2 was generated from alanine by octopus optic lobe and twice as much by the vertical lobe than rat cortex, but from glutamate, only 24 per cent in the optic and 15 per cent in the vertical lobe. No 14CO2 was generated from [U-14C]GABA in the octopus, by contrast with the rat. (4) Activity of some of the enzymes involved in amino acid metabolism was determined in homogenates of rat cortex and octopus optic and vertical lobes, with and without activation by Triton X-100. Enzymic activities in the octopus, with the exception of alanine aminotransferase, were lower than in the rat, and glutamate decarboxylase could not be detected in octopus brain, in the absence of detergent.  相似文献   

8.
Although labelled glutamine is readily incorporated into labelled releasable GABA, it has been shown recently that high concentrations (0.1–0.5 mM) glutamine do not increase the release of GABA from brain slices, while greatly enhancing that of glutamate. Two possible reasons for this discrepancy were investigated: (a) That released GABA, in contrast to glutamate is not freshly synthesized but derives from GABA taken up by terminals. The possibility was made unlikely by the present finding which showed that even in the presence of the uptake inhibitor nipecotic acid, glutamine failed to enhance GABA release. (b) That glutamine is transported into GABA-ergic terminals by a high-affinity transport system which is saturated even at low glutamine concentrations obtained without adding glutamine to the superfusion fluid. However, when glutamine efflux was further reduced by prolonging depolarization with 50 mM K+ and by pretreatment with the glutamine synthetase inhibitor methionine sulfoximine, GABA release was depressed only very little and this decrease was related to the duration of depolarization and not to extracellular glutamine levels. These results can be reconciled with the ready incorporation of labelled glutamine into releasable GABA by assuming that GABA originates from a glutamate pool to which both glutamine and glucose contribute. The formation of releasable GABA however, is not governed by the supply of glutamate in this pool but by the activity of the rate-limiting enzyme glutamate decarboxylase.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract: The synthesis of cis -2-(aminomethyl) cyclopropanecarboxylic acid, a new analogue of GABA in a folded conformation, is described, as is also an improved preparation of trans -2-(aminomethyl) cyclopropanecarboxylic acid. When adminstered microelectrophoretically the trans isomer was more potent than GABA as a bicuculline-sensitive depressant of the firing of cat spinal neurons in vivo , whereas the cis-isomer was less potent than GABA and its effects appeared not to be sensitive to bicuculline methochloride. Trans -2-(aminomethyl) cyclopropanecarboxylic acid was a weak inhibitor of the sodium-dependent uptake of GABA by mini slices of rat cerebral cortex and a substrate for the GABA: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase activity in extracts of rat brain mitochondria. The cis isomer did not influence GABA uptake or aminotransferase activity and neither isomer reduced glutamate decar-boxylase activity in rat brain homogenates. Both cyclopropane isomers inhibited the sodium-independent binding of GABA to synaptic membranes from rat brain and their relative potencies together with those found for the stereochemically related unsaturated derivatives, cis -and trans -4-aminocrotonic acid, were broadly consistent with the activity observed for these compounds in vivo on cat spinal neurons. These studies reinforce the evidence that extended rather than folded conformations of GABA are active at most GABA recognition sites within the mammalian central nervous system.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: We investigated the activity of the cerebral GABA shunt relative to the overall cerebral tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and the importance of the GABA shunt versus 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase for the conversion of 2-oxoglutarate into succinate in GABAergic neurons. Awake mice were dosed with [1-13C]glucose, and brain extracts were analyzed by 13C NMR spectroscopy. The percent enrichments of GABA C-2 and glutamate C-4 were the same: 5.0 ± 1.6 and 5.1 ± 0.2%, respectively (mean ± SD). This, together with previous data, indicates that the flux through the GABA shunt relative to the overall cerebral TCA cycle flux equals the GABA/glutamate pool size ratio, which in the mouse is 17%. It has previously been shown that under the experimental conditions used in this study, the 13C labeling of aspartate from [1-13C]glucose specifically reflects the metabolic activity of GABAergic neurons. In the present study, the reduction in the formation of [13C]aspartate during inhibition of the GABA shunt by γ-vinyl-GABA indicated that not more than half the flux from 2-oxoglutarate to succinate in GABAergic neurons goes via the GABA shunt. Therefore, because fluxes through the GABA shunt and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase in GABAergic neurons are approximately the same, the TCA cycle activity of GABAergic neurons could account for one-third of the overall cerebral TCA cycle activity in the mouse. Treatment with γ-vinyl-GABA, which increased GABA levels dramatically, caused changes in the 13C labeling of glutamate and glutamine, which indicated a reduction in the transfer of glutamate from neurons to glia, implying reduced glutamatergic neurotransmission. In the most severely affected animals these alterations were associated with convulsions.  相似文献   

11.
Homogenates of specific brain regions of three sensory systems (auditory, olfactory, and visual) were prepared from pigmented Long-Evans Hooded rats and assayed for amino acid concentrations and activities of glutaminase, aspartate aminotransferase (total, cytosolic, and, by difference, mitochondrial), malate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, and choline acetyltransferase. Comparing the quantitative distributions among regions revealed significant correlations between AAT and aspartate, between glutaminase and glutamate, between glutamate and glutamine, and between AAT plus glutaminase, or glutaminase alone, and the sum of aspartate, glutamate, and GABA, suggesting a metabolic pathway involving the synthesis of a glutamate pool as precursor to aspartate and GABA. Of the inhibitory transmitter amino acids, GABA concentrations routinely exceeded those of glycine, but glycine concentrations were relatively high in brainstem auditory structures.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The synthesis of glutamate and its conversion to glutamine and GABA were studied using labelled glucose in cerebral cortex, cerebellum and brainstem of rats intoxicated acutely with tetraethyl lead and chronically with lead acetate. To assess the interconversion and the synaptosomal accumulation of these amino acids, the labelling of glutamate, glutamine and GABA were measured in whole tissue and synaptosomes after giving labelled glutamate. The radioactive carbon dioxide production from labelled glutamate by brain slices was measured to evaluate the oxidation of glutamate. The tissue levels of glutamate, glutamine and GABA and the activity of glutamate decarboxylase were also measured in both conditions.In inorganic lead toxicity, even though the glutamate pool size was reduced, the glutamate-glutamine cycling between synaptosomes and astrocytes was increased. The oxidation of glutamate and the glutamate-GABA cycling were reduced. These findings suggest that brain tries to maintain the endogenous glutamate levels by decreasing the oxidation of glutamate and increasing the uptake systems and the cycling through glutamine in inorganic lead toxicity. In organic lead toxicity, the glutamate pool as well as glutamate turnover was reduced markedly resulting in complete distortion of glutamate metabolism.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: The amino acid content of synaptosomes was determined in six regions of rat brain, and in all regions the five predominant amino acids were glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, taurine, and GABA (γ-aminobutyrate). However, the proportions of the individual amino acids varied considerably from one region to another, the GABA content being particularly high and the taurine content low in synaptosomes from the diencephalon and mesencephalon. Administration of isonicotinic acid hydrazide to rats lowered the synaptosomal GABA level by similar amounts in all brain regions, but the administration of gabaculine resulted in a particularly long-acting elevation in GABA levels in the nerve endings of the diencephalon and mesencephalon. The possibility is raised that the high GABA levels in the nerve terminals of the diencephalon may be involved in the gabaculine-induced lowering of the body temperature of the rats. A constancy in the amount of the synaptosomal pool of "aspartate + glutamate + glutamine + GABA" was observed despite large changes in the relative amounts of the four amino acids brought about by gabaculine.  相似文献   

15.
The levels and specific radioactivities (SA) of glucose, lactate, pyruvate, α-oxoglutarate and seven amino acids in the brain of toads adapted to fresh water or to an hyperosmotic environment were analysed at various times (5 min–4 h) after an injection of [U-14C]glucose into the bloodstream. The concentrations and SA of glucose, lactate and five amino acids in blood plasma also were measured. In addition, the SA of glutamine, glutamate, aspartate and GABA in brain were determined 30 min after an injection of [1,5-14C]citrate into the cisterna magna. The flow of labelled carbon atoms from glucose to amino acids and related metabolites in the toad brain was qualitatively similar to that in the mammalian brain, but quantitatively less than one-tenth of the rate in the brain of rats. Hyperosmotic adaptation induced a large increase in the levels of glucose and amino acids in the brain without affecting the rate of glucose utilization. The SA of several amino acids relative to the SA of glucose were initially lower in hyperosmotically-adapted toads than in toads adapted to fresh water, presumably because of a greater dilution of isotope by the larger amino acid pools in the hyperosmotically-adapted toads. The rates of synthesis of alanine and glutamine from pyruvate and glutamate, respectively, appeared to increase with hyperosmotic adaptation, but the rate of GABA synthesis from glutamate was unaltered. The SA of α-oxoglutarate and glutamate were similar at all time periods in both groups of toads, an indication that these compounds were interconverted much more rapidly than the rate at which α-oxoglutarate was formed from isocitrate. The SA of lactate in comparison to that of glucose varied but was always considerably lower, even at 4 h after the [14C]glucose injection. After[U-14C]glucose, glutamine had a SA lower than that of glutamate, whereas after the injection of [14C]citrate, glutamine was formed with a SA much higher than that of glutamate. Hence, glutamate in the toad brain exhibited metabolic compartmentation similar to that in rat brain.  相似文献   

16.
1. Cerebral-cortex slices prelabelled with gamma-amino[1-(14)C]butyrate (GABA) were incubated in a glucose-saline medium. After the initial rapid uptake there was no appreciable re-entry of (14)C into the GABA pool, either from the medium or from labelled metabolites formed in the tissue. The kinetic constants of GABA metabolism were determined by computer simulation of the experimental results by using mathematical procedures. The GABA flux was estimated to be 0.03mumol per min/g, or about 8% of the total flux through the tricarboxylic acid cycle. It was found that the assumption of compartmentation did not greatly affect the estimates of the GABA flux. 2. The time-course of incorporation of (14)C into amino acids associated with the tricarboxylic acid cycle was followed with [1-(14)C]GABA and [U-(14)C]-glucose as labelled substrates. The results were consistent with the utilization of GABA via succinate. This was confirmed by determining the position of (14)C in the carbon skeletons of aspartate and glutamate formed after the oxidation of [1-(14)C]GABA. These results also indicated that under the experimental conditions the reversal of reactions catalysed by alpha-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and glutamate decarboxylase respectively was negligible. The conversion of [(14)C]GABA into gamma-hydroxybutyrate was probably also of minor importance, but decarboxylation of oxaloacetate did occur at a relatively slow rate. 3. When [1-(14)C]GABA was the labelled substrate there was evidence of a metabolic compartmentation of glutamate since, even before the peak of the incorporation of (14)C into glutamate had been reached, the glutamine/glutamate specific-radioactivity ratio was greater than unity. When [U-(14)C]glucose was oxidized this ratio was less than unity. The heterogeneity of the glutamate pool was indicated also by the relatively high specific radioactivity of GABA, which was comparable with that of aspartate during the whole incubation time (40min). The rates of equilibration of labelled amino acids between slice and medium gave evidence that the permeability properties of the glutamate compartments labelled as a result of oxidation of [1-(14)C]GABA were different from those labelled by the metabolism of [(14)C]glucose. The results showed therefore that in brain tissue incubated under the conditions used, the organization underlying metabolic compartmentation was preserved. The observed concentration ratios of amino acids between tissue and medium were also similar to those obtaining in vivo. These ratios decreased in the order: GABA>acidic acids>neutral amino acids>glutamine. 4. The approximate pool sizes of the amino acids in the different metabolic compartments were calculated. The glutamate content of the pool responsible for most of the labelling of glutamine during oxidation of [1-(14)C]GABA was estimated to be not more than 30% of the total tissue glutamate. The GABA content of the ;transmitter pool' was estimated to be 25-30% of the total GABA in the tissue. The structural correlates of metabolic compartmentation were considered.  相似文献   

17.
—Glucose is a major precursor of glutamate and related amino acids in the retina of adult rats. 14C from labelled glucose appears to gain access to a large glutamate pool, and the resulting specific activity of glutamate labelled from glucose is always higher than that of glutamine or the other amino acids. Radioactive acetate appeared to label a small glutamate pool. The specific activity of glutamine labelled from acetate relative to that of glutamate was always greater than 1.0. Other precursors of the small glutamate pool were found to include glutamate, aspartate, GABA, serine, leucine and sodium bicarbonate. The level of radioactivity present in retinae incubated with [U-14C]glucose or [1-14C]sodium acetate was reduced in the presence of 10?5m -ouabain. Under these conditions, the relative specific activity of glutamine labelled from [1-14C]sodium acetate was lowered, but it was raised when [U-14C]glucose was used as substrate. Ouabain also considerably reduced the synthesis of GABA from [1-14C]sodium acetate. In all cases ouabain caused a fall in the tissue levels of the amino acids. Aminooxyacetic acid (10?4m ) almost completely abolished the labelling of GABA from both [U-14C]glucose and [1-14C]sodium acetate, while the RSA of glutamine labelled from the latter substrate was significantly increased. Aminooxyacetic acid raised the tissue concentration of glutamate, but caused a fall in the tissue concentrations of glutamine, aspartate and GABA. The results suggest that there are separate compartments for the metabolism of glutamate in retina and that these can be modified in different ways by different drugs.  相似文献   

18.
gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) synthesis was studied in rat brain synaptosomes by measuring the increase of GABA level in the presence of the GABA-transaminase inhibitor gabaculine. The basal rate of synaptosomal GABA synthesis in glucose-containing medium (25.9 nmol/h/mg of protein) was only 3% of the maximal activity of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD; 804 +/- 83 nmol/h/mg of protein), a result indicating that synaptosomal GAD operates at only a small fraction of its catalytic capacity. Synaptosomal GABA synthesis was stimulated more than threefold by adding 500 microM glutamine. Glutamate also stimulated GABA synthesis, but the effect was smaller (1.5-fold). These results indicate that synaptosomal GAD is not saturated by endogenous levels of its substrate, glutamate, and account for part of the unused catalytic capacity. The greater stimulation of GABA synthesis by glutamine indicates that the GAD-containing compartment is more accessible to extrasynaptosomal glutamine than glutamate. The strong stimulation by glutamine also shows that the rates of uptake of glutamine and its conversion to glutamate can be sufficiently rapid to support GABA synthesis in nerve terminals. Synaptosomes carried out a slow net synthesis of aspartate in glucose-containing medium (7.7 nmol/h/mg of protein). Aspartate synthesis was strongly stimulated by glutamate and glutamine, but in this case the stimulation by glutamate was greater. Thus, the larger part of synaptosomal aspartate synthesis occurs in a different compartment than does GABA synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
1. The apparent Michaelis constants of the glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3), the glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase (EC 2.6.1.1) and the glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) of rat brain mitochondria derived from non-synaptic (M) and synaptic (SM2) sources were studied. 2. The kinetics of oxygen uptake of both populations of mitochondria in the presence of a fixed concentration of malate and various concentrations of glutamate or glutamine were investigated. 3. In both mitochondrial populations, glutamate-supported respiration in the presence of 2.5 mM-malate appears to be biphasic, one system (B) having an apparent Km for glutamate of 0.25 +/- 0.04 mM (n=7) and the other (A) of 1.64 +/- 0.5 mM (n=7) [when corrected for low-Km process, Km=2.4 +/- 0.75 mM (n=7)]. Aspartate production in these experiments followed kinetics of a single process with an apparent Km for glutamate of 1.8-2 mM, approximating to the high-Km process. 4. Oxygen-uptake measurement with both mitochondrial populations in the presence of malate and various glutamate concentrations in which amino-oxyacetate was present showed kinetics approximating only to the low-Km process (apparent Km for glutamate approximately 0.2 mM). Similar experiments in the presence of glutamate alone showed kinetics approximating only to the high-Km process (apparent Km for glutamate approximately 1-1.3 mM). 5. Oxygen uptake supported by glutamine (0-3 mM) and malate (2.5 mM) by the free (M) mitochondrial population, however, showed single-phase kinetics with an apparent Km for glutamine of 0.28 mM. 6. Aspartate and 2-oxoglutarate accumulation was measured in 'free' nonsynaptic (M) brain mitochondria oxidizing various concentrations of glutamate at a fixed malate concentration. Over a 30-fold increase in glutamate concentration, the flux through the glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase increased 7--8-fold, whereas the flux through 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase increased about 2.5-fold. 7. The biphasic kinetics of glutamate-supported respiration by brain mitochondria in the presence of malate are interpreted as reflecting this change in the relative fluxes through transamination and 2-oxoglutarate metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
Exchange transamination and the metabolism of glutamate in brain   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. Experiments were performed to throw light on why the incorporation of 14C from labelled carbohydrate precursors into glutamate has been found to be more marked in brain than in other tissues. 2. Rapid isotope exchange between labelled glutamate and unlabelled α-oxoglutarate was demonstrated in brain and liver mitochondrial preparations. In the presence but not in the absence of α-oxoglutarate the yield of 14CO2 from [1-14C]glutamate exceeded the net glutamate removal, and the final relative specific activities of the two substrates indicated that complete isotopic equilibration had occurred. Also, when in a brain preparation net glutamate removal was inhibited by malonate, isotope exchange between [1-14C]glutamate and α-oxoglutarate and the formation of 14CO2 were unaffected. 3. The time-course of isotope exchange between labelled glutamate and unlabelled α-oxoglutarate was followed in uncoupled brain and liver mitochondrial fractions, and the rate of exchange calculated by a computer was found to be 3–8 times more rapid than the maximal rate of utilization of the two substrates. 4. The physiological situation was imitated by the continuous infusion of small amounts of α-oxo[1-14C]glutarate into brain homogenate containing added glutamate. The fraction of 14C infused that was retained in the glutamate pool depended on the size of the latter, and the final relative specific activities of the two substrates indicated almost complete isotope exchange. Isotopic equilibration also occurred when α-oxoglutarate was generated from pyruvate through the tricarboxylic acid cycle in a brain mitochondrial preparation containing [1-14C]glutamate. 5. The differences in the incorporation of 14C from labelled glucose into the glutamate of brain and liver are discussed in terms of the rates of isotope exchange, the glutamate pool sizes and the rates of formation of labelled α-oxoglutarate in the two tissues. It is concluded that the differences between tissues in the incorporation of glucose carbon into glutamate reflect features of their metabolism largely unrelated to that of glutamate.  相似文献   

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