首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A signaling role of glutamine in insulin secretion   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Children with hypoglycemia due to recessive loss of function mutations of the beta-cell ATP-sensitive potassium (K(ATP)) channel can develop hypoglycemia in response to protein feeding. We hypothesized that amino acids might stimulate insulin secretion by unknown mechanisms, because the K(ATP) channel-dependent pathway of insulin secretion is defective. We therefore investigated the effects of amino acids on insulin secretion and intracellular calcium in islets from normal and sulfonylurea receptor 1 knockout (SUR1-/-) mice. Even though SUR1-/- mice are euglycemic, their islets are considered a suitable model for studies of the human genetic defect. SUR1-/- islets, but not normal islets, released insulin in response to an amino acid mixture ramp. This response to amino acids was decreased by 60% when glutamine was omitted. Insulin release by SUR1-/- islets was also stimulated by a ramp of glutamine alone. Glutamine was more potent than leucine or dimethyl glutamate. Basal intracellular calcium was elevated in SUR1-/- islets and was increased further by glutamine. In normal islets, methionine sulfoximine, a glutamine synthetase inhibitor, suppressed insulin release in response to a glucose ramp. This inhibition was reversed by glutamine or by 6-diazo-5-oxo-l-norleucine, a non-metabolizable glutamine analogue. High glucose doubled glutamine levels of islets. Methionine sulfoximine inhibition of glucose stimulated insulin secretion was associated with accumulation of glutamate and aspartate. We hypothesize that glutamine plays a critical role as a signaling molecule in amino acid- and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, and that beta-cell depolarization and subsequent intracellular calcium elevation are required for this glutamine effect to occur.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of different treatments on amino acid levels in neostriatum was studied to throw some light on the synthesis and metabolism of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Irreversible inhibition of GABA transaminase by microinjection of gamma-vinyl GABA (GVG) led to a decrease in aspartate, glutamate, and glutamine levels and an increase in the GABA level, such that the nitrogen pool remained constant. The results indicate that a large part of brain glutamine is derived from GABA. Hypoglycemia led to an increase in the aspartate level and a decrease in glutamate, glutamine, and GABA levels. The total amino acid pool was decreased compared with amino acid levels in normoglycemic rats. GVG treatment of hypoglycemic rats led to a decrease in the aspartate level and a further reduction in glutamate and glutamine levels. In this case, GABA accumulation continued, although the glutamine pool was almost depleted. The GABA level increased postmortem, but there were no detectable changes in levels of the other amino acids. Pretreatment of the rats with hypoglycemia reduced both glutamate and glutamine levels with a subsequent decreased postmortem GABA accumulation. The half-maximal GABA synthesis rate was obtained when the glutamate level was reduced by 50% and the glutamine level was reduced by 80%.  相似文献   

3.
Metabolic alterations in amino acids, high-energy phosphates, and intracellular pH during and after insulin hypoglycemia in the rat brain was studied in vivo by 1H and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Sequential accumulations of 1H and 31P spectra were obtained from a double-tuned surface coil positioned over the exposed skull of a rat while the electroencephalogram was recorded continuously. The transition to EEG silence was accompanied by rapid declines in phosphocreatine, nucleoside triphosphate, and an increase in inorganic orthophosphate in 31P spectra. In 1H spectra acquired during the same time interval, the resonances of glutamate and glutamine decreased in intensity while a progressive increase in aspartate was observed. Following glucose administration, glutamate and aspartate returned to control levels (recovery half-time, 8 min); recovery of glutamine was incomplete. An increase in lactate was detected in the 1H spectrum during recovery but it was not associated with any change in the intracellular pH as assessed in the corresponding 31P spectrum. Phosphocreatine returned to control levels following glucose administration, in contrast to nucleoside triphosphate and inorganic orthophosphate which recovered to only 80% and 200% of their control levels, respectively. These results show that the changes in cerebral amino acids and high-energy phosphates detected by alternating the collection of 1H and 31P spectra allow for a detailed assessment of the metabolic response of the hypoglycemic brain in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
By macroautoradiography and by GLC separation, differences in the uptake of radioactive carbon from [U-14C]glucose into free amino acids (glutamate + glutamine, aspartate + asparagine, GABA, alanine and glycine) in mouse cerebral neocortex, hippocampus, thalamus and hypothalamus were investigated. (1) The autoradiographical densities in the thalamus, cerebral neocortex and hippocampus measured with a microdensitometer were higher than that in the hypothalamus at 5 min after subcutaneous injection. At 180 min, densities in the cerebral neocortex, hippocampus and hypothalamus were higher than that in thalamus. (2) The free amino acid levels determined by GLC varied with each brain region. (3) The specific radioactivity (d.p.m./μmol) of alanine in each brain region was higher than that of the other amino acids at 5 min after the injection. The specific radioactivity of GABA in the brain regions was clearly higher than that of (glutamate + glutamine), (aspartate + asparagine) and glycine at 5 and 15 min. (4) The autoradiographical data were in good agreement with the chemical data at 5 min but were different at 180 min. (5) Variations in specific radioactivity of each free amino acid among brain regions at 5 min were influenced greatly by existing free amino acid concentrations in each region.  相似文献   

6.
Summary. Our purpose was to determine the blood amino acid concentration during insulin induced hypoglycemia (IIH) and examine if the administration of alanine or glutamine could help glycemia recovery in fasted rats. IIH was obtained by an intraperitoneal injection of regular insulin (1.0 U/kg). The blood levels of the majority of amino acids, including alanine and glutamine were decreased (P < 0.05) during IIH and this change correlates well with the duration than the intensity of hypoglycemia. On the other hand, the oral and intraperitoneal administration of alanine (100 mg/kg) or glutamine (100 mg/kg) accelerates glucose recovery. This effect was partly at least consequence of the increased capacity of the livers from IIH group to produce glucose from alanine and glutamine. It was concluded that the blood amino acids availability during IIH, particularly alanine and glutamine, play a pivotal role in recovery from hypoglycemia.  相似文献   

7.
The neuronal effects of glucose deficiency on amino acid metabolism was studied on three-dimensional cultures of rat telencephalon neurones. Transient (6 h) exposure of differentiated cultures to low glucose (0.25 mm instead of 25 mm) caused irreversible damage, as judged by the marked decrease in the activities of two neurone-specific enzymes and lactate dehydrogenase, 1 week after the hypoglycemic insult. Quantification of amino acids and ammonia in the culture media supernatants indicated increased amino acid utilization and ammonia production during glucose-deficiency. Measurement of intracellular amino acids showed decreased levels of alanine, glutamine, glutamate and GABA, while aspartate was increased. Added lactate (11 mm) during glucose deficiency largely prevented the changes in amino acid metabolism and ammonia production, and attenuated irreversible damage. Higher media levels of glutamine (4 mm instead of 0.25 mm) during glucose deprivation prevented the decrease of intracellular glutamate and GABA, while it further increased intracellular aspartate, ammonia production and neuronal damage. Both lactate and glutamine were readily oxidized in these neuronal cultures. The present results suggest that in neurones, glucose deficiency enhances amino acid deamination at the expense of transamination reactions. This results in increased ammonia production and neuronal damage.  相似文献   

8.
—(1) Synaptosomes incubated in high sodium, low potassium media showed high linear respiration in the presence of glucose which was converted into lactate, aspartate, glutamate, glutamine, alanine and GABA during 1 hr incubation periods. (2) Total conversion of glucose into most of these substrates over the incubation period was similar in synaptosomes and cortex slices. Half the lactate and only a small fraction of the glutamine made by slices was formed by synaptosomes. (3) Pool sizes of amino acids in cortex slices after incubation with glucose were, in general, higher than in synaptosomes, glutamate and glutamine being four-fold higher in slices. (4) Most of the amino acids made from glucose by synaptosomes were contained within their structure and not lost to the medium. (5) Glutamate was actively metabolized by synaptosomes to aspartate, glutamine, alanine and GABA. The specific radioactivities of the amino acids (except glutamine) after 1 hr incubation, approached that of the glutamate. (6) Pyridoxal phosphate added to the incubation medium increased GABA production from glutamate but not from glucose.  相似文献   

9.
Severe hypoglycemia was induced by insulin in lightly anaesthetized (70°o N2O) and artificially ventilated rats. Brain tissue was frozen in situ after spontaneous EEG potentials had disappeared for 5. 10. 15 or 30 min and cerebral cortex concentrations of labile organic phosphates, glycolytic metabolites, ammonia and amino acids were determined. In other experiments, recovery was induced by glucose injection at the end of the period of EEG silence. All animals with an isoelectric EEG showed extensive deterioration of the cerebral energy state. and gross perturbation of amino acid concentrations. The latter included a 4-fold rise in aspartate concentration and reductions in glutamate and glutamine concentrations to 20 and 5oo of control levels respectively. There was an associated rise in ammonia concentration to about 3μmol-g-1. Administration of glucose brought about extensive recovery of cerebral energy metabolism. For example, after an isoelectric period of 30 min tissue concentrations of phosphocreatine returned to or above normal, the accumulation of ADP and AMP was reversed, there was extensive resynthesis of glycogen and glutamine and full normalisation of tissue concentrations of pyruvate. α-ketoglutarate. GABA and ammonia. However, even after 3 h of recovery there was a reduction in the ATP concentration and thereby in adenine nucleotide pool, moderate elevations of lactate content and the lactate pyruvate ratio, and less than complete restoration of the amino acid pool. It is concluded that some cells may have been irreversibly damaged by the hypoglycemia.  相似文献   

10.
To obtain evidence of the site of conversion of [U-14C]glucose into glutamate and related amino acids of the brain, a mixture of [U-14C]glucose and [3H]glutamate was injected subcutaneously into rats. [3H]Glutamate gave rise to several 3H-labelled amino acids in rat liver and blood; only 3H-labelled glutamate, glutamine or γ-aminobutyrate were found in the brain. The specific radioactivity of [3H]glutamine in the brain was higher than that of [3H]glutamate indicating the entry of [3H]glutamate mainly in the ‘small glutamate compartment’. The 14C-labelling pattern of amino acids in the brain and liver after injection of [U-14C]glucose was similar to that previously reported (Gaitonde et al., 1965). The specific radioactivity of [14C]glutamine in the blood and liver after injection of both precursors was greater than that of glutamate between 10 and 60 min after the injection of the precursors. The extent of labelling of alanine and aspartate was greater than that of other amino acids in the blood after injection of [U-14C]glucose. There was no labelling of brain protein with [3H]glutamate during the 10 min period, but significant label was found at 30 and 60 min. The highest relative incorporation of [14C]glutamate and [14C]aspartate in rat brain protein was observed at 5 min after the injection of [U-14C]glucose. The results have been discussed in the context of transport of glutamine synthesized in the brain and the site of metabolism of [U-14C]glucose in the brain.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract The glutamate (Glu) terminals in rat neostriatum were removed by a unilateral frontal decortication. One to two weeks later the effects of insulin-induced hypoglycemia on the steady-state levels of amino acids [Glu, glutamine (Gin), aspartate (Asp), γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), tau-rine] and energy metabolites (glucose, glycogen, α-ketoglu-tarate, pyruvate, lactate, ATP, ADP, AMP, phosphocre-atine) were examined in the intact and decorticated neostriatum from brains frozen in situ. The changes in the metabolite levels were examined during normoglycemia, hypoglycemia with burst-suppression (BS) EEG, after 5 and 30 min of hypoglycemic coma with isoelectric EEG, and 1 h of recovery following 30 min of isoelectric EEG. In normoglycemia Glu decreased and Gin and glycogen increased significantly on the decorticated side. During the BS period no significant differences in the measured compounds were noted between the two sides. After 5 min of isoelectric EEG Glu, Gin, GABA, and ATP levels were significantly lower and Asp higher on the intact than on the decorticated side. No differences between the two sides were found after 30 min of isoelectric EEG. After 1 h of recovery from 30 min of isoelectric EEG Glu, Gin, and glycogen had not reached their control levels. Glu was significantly lower, and Gin and glycogen higher on the decorticated side. The Asp and GABA levels were not significantly different from control levels. The results indicate that the turnover of Glu is higher in the intact than in decorticated neostriatum during profound hypoglycemia.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract— [2-14C]Propionate injected into rats was metabolized into [14C]glucose and 14C-labelled aspartate, glutamate, glutamine and alanine. The results are consistent with the conversion of propionate into succinate and the oxidation of succinate into oxaloacetate, the precursor of labelled amino acids and the substrate for gluconeogenesis.
The ratio of the specific radioactivity of glutamine to glutamate was greater than 1 during the 30 min period in the brain, indicating that propionate taken up by the brain was metabolized mainly in the 'small glutamate compartment' in the brain. The results, therefore, support the previous conclusion (G aitonde , 1975) that the labelling of amino acids by [14C]propionate formed from [U-14C>]-threonine in thiamin-deficient rats was metabolized in the 'large glutamate compartment' of the brain.
The specific radioactivity ratio of glutamine to glutamate in the liver was less than 1 during the 10 min period but greater than 1 at 30min. These findings which gave evidence against metabolic compartments of glutamate in the liver, were interpreted as indicative of the entry of blood-borne [14C]glutamine synthesized in other tissues, e.g. brain. The labelling of amino acids when compared to that after injection of [U-14C]glucose showed that [2-14C]propionate was quantitatively a better source of amino acids in the liver. The concentration of some amino acids in the brain and liver was less in the adult than in the young rats, except for alanine and glutathione, where the liver content was more than double that in the adult.  相似文献   

13.
Under conditions of energy impairment, CNS tissue can utilize substrates other than glucose to maintain energy metabolism. Retinas produce large amounts of lactate, although it has not been shown that lactate can be utilized by retina to prevent the cell damage associated with hypoglycemia. To investigate this, intact, isolated retinas were subjected to aglycemic conditions in the presence or absence of 20 mM lactate. Retinas incubated in the absence of glucose for 60 min showed a threefold elevation in tissue aspartate and 60% decreases in tissue glutamate and glutamine, demonstrating a mobilization of carbon from glutamine and glutamate to the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Lactate prevented these changes in tissue amino acids, indicating metabolism of lactate with sparing of tissue glutamate and glutamine. Tissue ATP was 20 and 66% of control values with zero glucose or zero glucose plus lactate, respectively. Consistent with previous findings, incubation of retinas in the absence of glucose caused acute swelling of retinal neurons and release of GABA into the medium at 60 min. These acute toxic affects caused by the absence of glucose were completely prevented by the presence of lactate. At 24 h of recovery following 60 min of zero glucose, many pyknotic profiles were observed and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release into the medium was elevated sevenfold, indicating the extent of cell death. In contrast, no elevation in LDH was found and histology appeared normal in retinas exposed to zero glucose in the presence of lactate. alpha-Cyano-4-hydroxy cinnamate (4-CIN; 0.5 mM), an inhibitor of the monocarboxylic acid transporter and mitochondrial pyruvate carrier, blocked the ability of lactate to maintain ATP and protect retinas from aglycemia but had no effect on ATP or toxicity per se. Derangements in tissue aspartate, glutamate, and glutamine, which were prevented by lactate during zero glucose incubation, were again observed with lactate plus zero glucose in the presence of 4-CIN. However, 0.5 mM 4-CIN alone in the presence of glucose produced similar increases in aspartate and decreases in glutamate and glutamine as observed with zero glucose while having only modest inhibitory effects on [U-(14)C]lactate uptake, suggesting the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier as the main site of action. The above findings show that lactate is readily utilized by the chick retina during glucose deprivation to prevent derangements in tissue amino acids and ATP and retinal neuronal cell death.  相似文献   

14.
The viability of the isolated toad brain in an aerated Ringer-like medium has been evaluated by the following criteria: 1) amino acid content before and after incubation; 2) accumulation of amino acids in the incubation medium; 3) a comparison of glucose utilization and [U-14C]glucose metabolism with that occurring in vivo; 4) tissue swelling; and 5) tissue lactate contents. On the basis of these criteria, the isolated toad brain, from toads adapted to a fresh-water or a salt-water environment, retains considerable metabolic integrity for at least 2 hr of incubation at 25 degrees C. Specifically, there was no swelling of the tissue, no apparent accumulation of lactate in the tissue, glucose appeared to be utilized at a rate not too different from that calculated for the toad brain in vivo, and the distribution of label from [U-14C]glucose had an overall pattern which resembled that observed in vivo. The tissue levels of amino acids were generally stable in vitro; however, there was a marked decline in the content of aspartate. The accumulation of amino acids in the medium varied considerably from one amino acid to another. Thus, there was very little net efflux of aspartate, GABA, and glutamate from the tissue but considerable net efflux of glutamine. This efflux of amino acids was greater from brains of hyperosmotically adapted toads than from the brains of toads adapted to fresh water by amounts proportional to their initial tissue contents.  相似文献   

15.
—The development with age of the pattern of distribution of glucose carbon characteristic of the adult brain was studied in 7-, 13-, 19- and 24-day-old rats suckling from mothers maintained on a diet containing 4·5% lead acetate or on a normal diet. In normal rats the rapid and extensive conversion of glucose carbon into amino acids associated with the tricarboxylic acid cycle has been shown to develop in the cerebellum and the cerebral cortex during the same period as previously observed for the whole forebrain. A significant retardation was observed in both brain parts of rats suckling from mothers ingesting lead. In comparison with glutamate, aspartate and γ-aminobutyrate, the labelling of glutamine was particularly low. The concentration of glutamine was not affected in the forebrain, but it was elevated in the cerebellum. The age-dependent rise in the amounts of glutamate and aspartate was also retarded, but it would appear that the contribution of this effect to the depressed labelling of amino acids was small. There was no evidence of impaired entry of glucose into the brain from the blood. Although in comparison with undernourished animals, the growth retardation of the lead-treated rats is similar, several of the effects observed on the developing brain seem to be distinct.  相似文献   

16.
Magnesium probably protects brain tissue against the effects of cerebral ischemia, brain injury and stroke through its actions as a calcium antagonist and inhibitor of excitatory amino acids. The effects of magnesium sulfate on cerebrovascular permeability to a dye, Evans blue, were studied during insulin-induced hypoglycemia with hypothermia in rats. Hypoglycemia was induced by an intramuscular injection of insulin. After giving insulin, each animal received MgSO4 (270 mg/kg) ip, followed by a 27 mg/kg dose every 20 min for 2.5 h. Plasma glucose and Mg2+ levels of animals were measured. Magnesium concentrations increased in the serum following MgSO4 administration (6.05+/-0.57 vs. 2.58+/-0.14 mg/dL in the Mg2+ group, and 7.14+/-0.42 vs. 2.78+/-0.06 mg/dL in the insulin + Mg2+ group, P < 0.01). Plasma glucose levels decreased following hypoglycemia (4+/-0.66 vs. 118+/-2.23 mg/dL in the insulin group, and 7+/-1.59 vs. 118+/-4.84 mg/dL in the insulin + Mg2+ group, P < 0.01). Blood-brain barrier permeability to Evans blue considerably increased in hypoglycemic rats (P < 0.01). In contrast, blood-brain barrier permeability to Evans blue was significantly reduced in treatment of hypoglycemic rats with MgSO4 (P < 0.01). These results indicate that Mg2+ greatly reduced the passage of exogenous vascular tracer bound to albumin into the brain during hypoglycemia with hypothermia. Mg2+ could have protective effects on blood-brain barrier permeability against insulin-induced hypoglycemia.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: 2-Amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid, an antagonist of excitation caused by dicarboxylic amino acids with a selective action on N -methyl-d-aspartate receptors, has been administered in an anticonvulsant dose (1 mmol/kg i.p.) to fed or fasted rats and mice. The drug impaired motor activity in fasted mice. Glucose and amino acids were determined in dissected regions of brain fixed by microwave irradiation. Glucose content was low in the brains of fasted rats and mice but was restored to normal (fed) concentration 45 min after the administration of 2-amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid in fasted mice. In fed animals, 2-amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid did not change brain aspartate concentration. In fasted animals, aspartate concentration was raised in most brain regions. In fasted rats and mice, 2-amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid significantly increased glutamine in rat cortex and mouse striatum, decreased glutamate content in rat striatum, and decreased aspartate concentration in all regions except mouse cortex and striatum. GABA levels were significantly decreased in rat striatum and hippocampus. These changes are consistent with an increased synaptic release of glutamate and aspartate following blockage of their post-synaptic action at selected sites.  相似文献   

18.
—During anoxia induced by the administration of potassium cyanide, [U-14C]glucose was injected intraperitoneally into adult mice and they were decapitated at 5, 15 and 30 min after the injection. After freeze-drying in vacuo, differences in the uptake of radioactive carbon from [U-14C]glucose into free amino acids (glutamate + glutamine, aspartate + asparagine, GABA, alanine and glycine) in mouse cerebral neocortex, cerebellar hemisphere, caudate nucleus, thalamus, hypothalamus and medulla oblongata were investigated (by macroautoradiography and GLC separation) and compared with those obtained under normal conditions. (1) During anoxia, autoradiographical densities in the thalamus and medulla oblongata were higher than that in the cerebral neocortex and caudate nucleus. (2) Among specific radioactivities (d.p.m./μmol) of free amino acids, alanine gave the highest value during anoxia, except in the cerebellar hemisphere and hypothalamus at 5 min and the medulla oblongata at 30 min. (3) During anoxia, the specific radioactivities of alanine and glycine in each brain region did not significantly decrease at 15 and 30 min compared with those under normal conditions. During anoxia, the specific radioactivity of glutamate + glutamine in the cerebellar hemisphere and hypothalamus did not significantly decrease compared with the normal conditions, while that of GABA, aspartate + asparagine and glutamate + glutamine in the cerebral neocortex, caudate nucleus, thalamus and medulla oblongata showed an increase. (4) The percentage decrease of glutamate + glutamine and aspartate + asparagine at 5 and 15 min was highly significant in the cerebral neocortex and caudate nucleus.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was used to study the metabolic pathways involved in the conversion of glucose to glutamate, γ-aminobutyrate (GABA), glutamine, and aspartate. d -[1-13C]Glucose was administered to rats intraperitoneally, and 6, 15, 30, or 45 min later the rats were killed and extracts from the forebrain were prepared for 13C-NMR analysis and amino acid analysis. The absolute amount of 13C present within each carbon-atom pool was determined for C-2, C-3, and C-4 of glutamate, glutamine, and GABA, for C-2 and C-3 of aspartate, and for C-3 of lactate. The natural abundance 13C present in extracts from control rats was also determined for each of these compounds and for N-acetylaspartate and taurine. The pattern of labeling within glutamate and GABA indicates that these amino acids were synthesized primarily within compartments in which glucose was metabolized to pyruvate, followed by decarboxylation to acetyl-CoA for entry into the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In contrast, the labeling pattern for glutamine and aspartate indicates that appreciable amounts of these amino acids were synthesized within a compartment in which glucose was metabolized to pyruvate, followed by carboxylation to oxaloacetate. These results are consistent with the concept that pyruvate carboxylase and glutamine synthetase are glia-specific enzymes, and that this partially accounts for the unusual metabolic compartmentation in CNS tissues. The results of our study also support the concept that there are several pools of glutamate, with different metabolic turnover rates. Our results also are consistent with the concept that glutamine and/or a tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediate is supplied by astrocytes to neurons for replenishing the neurotransmitter pool of GABA. However, a similar role for astrocytes in replenishing the transmitter pool of glutamate was not substantiated, possibly due to difficulties in quantitating satellite peaks arising from 13C-13C coupling.  相似文献   

20.
The treatment of rats for 4 h with 6-aminonicotinamide (60 mg kg-1) resulted in an 180-fold increase in the concentration of 6-phosphogluconate in their brains; glucose increased 2.6-fold and glucose 6-phosphate, 1.7-fold. Moreover, lactate decreased by 20%, glutamate by 8% and gamma-aminobutyrate by 12%, and aspartate increased by 10%. No significant changes were found in glutamine and citrate. In blood, 6-phosphogluconate increased 5-fold; glucose, 1.4-fold and glucose 6-phosphate, 1.8-fold. The metabolism of glucose in the rat brain, via both the Embden-Meyerhof pathway and the hexose monophosphate shunt, was investigated by injecting [U-14C]glucose or [2-14C]glucose, and that via the hexose monophosphate shunt alone by injecting [3,4-14C]glucose. The total radioactive yield of amino acids in the rat brain was 5.63 mumol at 20 min after injection of [U-14C]glucose, or 5.82 mumol after injection of [2-14C]glucose; by contrast, it was 0.62 mumol after injection of [3,4-14C]glucose. The treatment of rats with 6-aminonicotinamide showed significant decreases in these values, owing to decreases in the radioactive yields of glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, gamma-aminobutyrate, and alanine+glycine+serine. Glutamate isolated from the brain contained approximately 43% of its radioactivity in carbon 1 after injection of [3,4-14C]glucose, in contrast to 13% and 18% after injection of [U-14C]glucose and [2-14C]glucose, respectively, in both the control and treated rats. The calculations based on these findings showed that approximately 69% of the 14C-labelled glutamate was formed from [14C]acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl CoA) and the residual 31% by 14CO2 fixation of pyruvate after injection of [3,4-14C]glucose in both control and treated rats. The results gave direct evidence that glutamate and gamma-aminobutyrate in the brain were formed by metabolism of glucose via the hexose monophosphate shunt as well as via the Embden-Meyerhof pathway. From the radioactive yields of glutamate formed via [14C]acetyl CoA it was estimated that approximately 7.8% of the total glucose utilized was channelled via the hexose monophosphate shunt. Assuming that [14C]glutamate formed by carbon-dioxide fixation of pyruvate was also dependent on the metabolism of glucose through the hexose monophosphate shunt, the estimated value was approximately 9.5% of the total glucose converted into glutamate. The results of the present investigation, taken in conjunction with other findings, suggest that the utilization of glucose via the hexose monophosphate shunt is functionally important in the rat brain.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号