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1.
Glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) was localized within the matrix compartment of avian liver mitochondria. The submitochondrial localization of this enzyme was determined by the digitonin-Lubrol method of Schnaitman and Greenawalt (35). The matrix fraction contained over 74% of the glutamine synthetase activity and the major proportion of the matirx marker enzymes, malate dehydrogenase (71%), NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (83%), and glutamate dehydrogenase (57%). The highest specific activities of these enzymes were also found in the matrix compartment. Oxidation of glutamine by avian liver mitochondria was substantially less than that of glutamate. Bromofuroate, an inhibitor of glutamate dehydrogenase, blocked oxidation of glutamate and of glutamine whereas aminoxyacetate, a transaminase inhibitor, had little or no effect with either substrate. These results indicate that glutamine metabolism is probably initiated by the conversion of glutamine to glutamate rather than to an alpha-keto acid. The localization of a glutaminase activity within avian liver mitochondria plus the absence of an active mitochondrial glutamine transaminase is consistent with the differential effects of the transaminase and glutamate dehydrogenase inhibitors. The high glutamine synthetase activity (40:1) suggests that mitochondrial catabolism of glutamine is minimal, freeing most of the glutamine synthesized for purine (uric acid) biosynthesis.  相似文献   

2.
1. Rats were infused with 15NH4+ or L-[15N]alanine to induce hyperammonaemia, a potential cause of hepatic encephalopathy. HClO4 extracts of freeze-clamped brain, liver and kidney were analysed by 15N-n.m.r. spectroscopy in combination with biochemical assays to investigate the effects of hyperammonaemia on tissue concentrations of ammonia, glutamine, glutamate and urea. 2. 15NH4+ infusion resulted in a 36-fold increase in the concentration of blood ammonia. Cerebral glutamine concentration increased, with 15NH4+ incorporated predominantly into the gamma-nitrogen atom of glutamine. Incorporation into glutamate was very low. Cerebral ammonia concentration increased 5-10-fold. The results suggest that the capacity of glutamine synthetase for ammonia detoxification was saturated. 3. Pretreatment with the glutamine synthetase inhibitor L-methionine DL-sulphoximine resulted in 84% inhibition of [gamma-15N]glutamine synthesis, but incorporation of 15N into other metabolites was not observed. The result suggests that no major alternative pathway for ammonia detoxification, other than glutamine synthetase, exists in rat brain. 4. In the liver 15NH4+ was incorporated into urea, glutamine, glutamate and alanine. The specific activity of 15N was higher in the gamma-nitrogen atom of glutamine than in urea. A similar pattern was observed when [15N]alanine was infused. The results are discussed in terms of the near-equilibrium states of the reactions involved in glutamate and alanine formation, heterogeneous distribution in the liver lobules of the enzymes involved in ammonia removal and their different affinities for ammonia. 5. Synthesis of glutamine, glutamate and hippurate de novo was observed in kidney. Hippurate, as well as 15NH4+, was contributed by co-extracted urine. 6. The potential utility and limitations of 15N n.m.r. for studies of mammalian metabolism in vivo are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Cerebral Ammonia Metabolism in Hyperammonemic Rats   总被引:7,自引:7,他引:0  
The short-term metabolic fate of blood-borne [13N]ammonia was determined in the brains of chronically (8- or 14-week portacaval-shunted rats) or acutely (urease-treated) hyperammonemic rats. Using a "freeze-blowing" technique it was shown that the overwhelming route for metabolism of blood-borne [13N]ammonia in normal, chronically hyperammonemic and acutely hyperammonemic rat brain was incorporation into glutamine (amide). However, the rate of turnover of [13N]ammonia to L-[amide-13N]glutamine was slower in the hyperammonemic rat brain than in the normal rat brain. The activities of several enzymes involved in cerebral ammonia and glutamate metabolism were also measured in the brains of 14-week portacaval-shunted rats. The rat brain appears to have little capacity to adapt to chronic hyperammonemia because there were no differences in activity compared with those of weight-matched controls for the following brain enzymes involved in glutamate/ammonia metabolism: glutamine synthetase, glutamate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase, glutamine transaminase, glutaminase, and glutamate decarboxylase. The present findings are discussed in the context of the known deleterious effects on the CNS of high ammonia levels in a variety of diseases.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the effects of sodium valproate, a widely used antiepileptic drug and a hyperammonemic agent, on L-[1-14C]glutamine and L-[1-14C]glutamate metabolism in isolated human kidney-cortex tubules. Valproate markedly stimulated glutamine removal as well as the formation of ammonia, 14CO2, pyruvate, lactate and alanine, but it inhibited glucose synthesis; the increase in ammonia formation was explained by a stimulation by valproate mainly of flux through glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) and to a much lesser extent of flux through glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3). By contrast, valproate did not stimulate glutamate removal or ammonia formation, suggesting that the increase in flux through glutamate dehydrogenase observed with glutamine as substrate was secondary to the increase in flux through glutaminase. Accumulation of pyruvate, alanine and lactate in the presence of valproate was less from glutamate than from glutamine. Inhibition by aminooxyacetate of accumulation of alanine from glutamine caused by valproate did not prevent the acceleration of glutamine utilization and the subsequent stimulation of ammonia formation. It is concluded from these data, which are the first concerning the in vitro metabolism of glutamine and glutamate in human kidney-cortex tubules, that the stimulatory effect of valproate is primarily exerted at the level of glutaminase in human renal cortex.  相似文献   

5.
An alternative route for the primary assimilation of ammonia proceeds via glutamine synthetase-carbamyl phosphate synthetase and its inherent glutaminase activity in Anabaena sp. strain 1F, a marine filamentous, heterocystous cyanobacterium. Evidence for the presence of this possible alternative route to glutamate was provided by the use of amino acid analogs as specific enzyme inhibitors, enzymological studies, and radioistopic labeling experiments. The amino acid pool patterns of continuous cultures of Anabaena sp. strain 1F were markedly influenced by the nitrogen source. A relatively high concentration of glutamate was maintained in the amino acid pools of all cultures irrespective of the nitrogen source, reflecting the central role of glutamate in nitrogen metabolism. The addition of 1.0 microM azaserine increased the intracellular pools of glutamate and glutamine. All attempts to detect any enzymatic activity for glutamate synthase by measuring the formation of L-[14C]glutamate from 2-keto-[1-14C]glutarate and glutamine failed. The addition of 10 microM DL-7-azatryptophan caused a transient accumulation of intracellular citrulline and alanine which was not affected by the presence of chloramphenicol. The in vitro activity of carbamyl phosphate synthetase and glutaminase increased severalfold in the presence of azatryptophan. Results from radioisotopic labeling experiments with [14C]bicarbonate and L-[1-14C]ornithine also indicated that citrulline was formed via carbamyl phosphate synthetase and ornithine transcarbamylase. In addition to its effects on nitrogen metabolism, azatryptophan also affected carbon metabolism by inhibiting photosynthetic carbon assimilation and photosynthetic oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

6.
1. The pathways and the fate of glutamate carbon and nitrogen were investigated in isolated guinea-pig kidney-cortex tubules. 2. At low glutamate concentration (1 mM), the glutamate carbon skeleton was either completely oxidized or converted into glutamine. At high glutamate concentration (5 mM), glucose, lactate and alanine were additional products of glutamate metabolism. 3. At neither concentration of glutamate was there accumulation of ammonia. 4. Nitrogen-balance calculations and the release of 14CO2 from L-[1-14C]glutamate (which gives an estimation of the flux of glutamate carbon skeleton through alpha-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase) clearly indicated that, despite the absence of ammonia accumulation, glutamate metabolism was initiated by the action of glutamate dehydrogenase and not by transamination reactions as suggested by Klahr, Schoolwerth & Bourgoignie [(1972) Am. J. Physiol. 222, 813-820] and Preuss [(1972) Am. J. Physiol. 222, 1395-1397]. Additional evidence for this was obtained by the use of (i) amino-oxyacetate, an inhibitor of transaminases, which did not decrease glutamate removal, or (ii) L-methionine DL-sulphoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, which caused an accumulation of ammonia from glutamate. 5. Addition of NH4Cl plus glutamate caused an increase in both glutamate removal and glutamine synthesis, demonstrating that the supply of ammonia via glutamate dehydrogenase is the rate-limiting step in glutamine formation from glutamate. NH4Cl also inhibited the flux of glutamate through glutamate dehydrogenase and the formation of glucose, alanine and lactate. 6. The activities of enzymes possibly involved in the glutamate conversion into pyruvate were measured in guinea-pig renal cortex. 7. Renal arteriovenous-difference measurements revealed that in vivo the guinea-pig kidney adds glutamine and alanine to the circulating blood.  相似文献   

7.
The mitochondria isolated from transplantable chicken hepatomatous growth induced by MC-29 virus were deficient in glutamate dehydrogenase. Oxypolarographic tests showed that glutamate oxidation in the tumor mitochondria was initiated via transamination, while glutamate was deaminated by glutamate dehydrogenase in liver mitochondria to supply adenosine triphosphate. Prominent glutamate oxidation and transformation-linked low glutamine synthetase activity may be favorable to the bioenergetics of this fast-growing tumor.  相似文献   

8.
1. The oxidation of glutamine by kidney-cortex mitochondria from normal and acidotic rats was not inhibited by avenaciolide, which did inhibit glutamate uptake and oxidation. The oxidation of glutamine by these mitochondria was always greater than that of glutamate. Direct measurements of the metabolism of [1-14C]glutamine in the presence of glutamate, and of [1-14C]glutamate in the presence of glutamine, demonstrated that the uptake and metabolism of external glutamate is insufficient to account for the observed rate of glutamine uptake and metabolism. Thus the postulated glutamine/glutamate antiport does not play a quantitatively important role in the metabolism of glutamine by renal mitochondria. 2. Rapid swelling of these mitochondria was observed in iso-osmotic solutions of L-glutamine and L-glutamyl-gamma-monohydroxamate but not in D-glutamine or L-isoglutamine (1-amido-2-aminoglutaric acid). Thus a relatively specific glutamine uniport exists in these mitochondria. 3. The utilization of glutamine was increased about 3-fold in mitochondria from chronically acidotic rats. Thus mitochondrial adaptations play an important part in the renal response to metabolic acidosis.  相似文献   

9.
N-Acetyl-L-glutamate synthetase (EC 2.3.1.1) catalyses the synthesis of N-acetyl-L-glutamate, an allosteric activator of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I in the liver of ureotelic animals, and the first enzyme is activated specifically by arginine. We have proposed that arginine can stimulate acetylglutamine synthetase in vivo and thereby increase the mitochondrial content of acetylglutamate. The effects of arginine on acetylglutamate synthesis in isolated mitochondria were investigated in detail in the present work. When rat liver mitochondria were isolated and incubated with [14C]glutamate and unlabelled acetate as substrates, acetyl[14C]glutamate synthesis in the mitochondria was more extensive in the presence than in the absence of L-arginine. There was no significant difference between the specific radioactivities of intramitochondrial [14C]glutamate in the presence and absence of arginine. When rat liver mitochondria were incubated with [14C]acetate and unlabelled glutamate as substrates, arginine also stimulated acetyl[14C]glutamate synthesis in the isolated mitochondria. L-Lysine or L-homoarginine, which does not activate acetylglutamate synthetase, had no effect on acetylglutamate synthesis, in the isolated mitochondria. The arginine concentration giving half-maximal synthesis of acetylglutamate in isolated mitochondria was about 50 microM, which is in the range of physiological concentrations of arginine in the liver. As we previously reported [Kawamoto, Ishida, Mori & Tatibana (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 123, 637-641], the sensitivity of acetylglutamate synthetase to arginine activation undergoes marked changes after food ingestion. The extent of arginine activation of acetylglutamate synthesis in isolated mitochondria correlated well with the sensitivity of acetylglutamate synthetase extracted from the mitochondria to arginine activation. These data lend further support to the idea that arginine itself activates the mitochondrial synthesis of acetylglutamate.  相似文献   

10.
Kinetic and biochemical parameters of nitrogen-13 flux from L-[13N]glutamate in myocardium were examined. Tissue radioactivity kinetics and chemical analyses were determined after bolus injection of L-[13N]glutamate into isolated arterially perfused interventricular septa under various metabolic states, which included addition of lactate, pyruvate, aminooxyacetate (a transaminase inhibitor), or a combination of aminooxyacetate and pyruvate to the standard perfusate containing insulin and glucose. Chemical analysis of tissue and effluent at 6 min allowed determination of the composition of the slow third kinetic component of the time-activity curves. 13N-labeled aspartate, alanine and glutamate accounted for more than 80% of the tissue nitrogen-13 under the experimental conditions used. Specific activities for these amino acids were constant, but not identical to each other, from 6 through 15 min after administration of L-[13N]glutamate. Little labeled ammonia (1.9%) and glutamine (4.7%) were produced, indicating limited accessibility of exogenous glutamate to catabolic mitochondrial glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase, under control conditions. Lactate and pyruvate additions did not affect tissue amino acid specific activities. Aminooxyacetate suppressed formation of 13N-labeled alanine and aspartate and increased production of L-[13N]glutamine and [13N]ammonia. Formation of [13N]ammonia was, however, substantially decreased when aminooxyacetate was used in the presence of exogenous pyruvate. The data support a model for glutamate compartmentation in myocardium not affected by increasing the velocity of enzymatic reactions through increased substrate (i.e., lactate or pyruvate) concentrations but which can be altered by competitive inhibition of transaminases (via aminooxyacetate) making exogenous glutamate more available to other compartments.  相似文献   

11.
1. Glutamine synthetase has been purified to homogeneity from chicken liver mitochondria. 2. The native enzyme is an octamer composed of identical subunits with monomeric mol. wt of 42,000 dalton. 3. Apparent Kms for NH4+, ATP and glutamate were 0.5, 0.9 and 6 mM, respectively. D-Glutamate and L-alpha-hydroxyglutarate were utilized as substrates with activities approx. 40% those obtained with glutamate. Of several nucleotides tested, none were effective replacements for ATP. 4. Heavy metal ions were inhibitory as were Mn2+, Ca2+ and lanthanide ions. 5. Despite its different subcellular localization and physiological function, avian glutamine synthetase is markedly similar to the weakly-bound microsomal rat liver enzyme with respect to a number of physical and chemical properties.  相似文献   

12.
Ammonia assimilation for urea synthesis by liver mitochondria in marine elasmobranchs involves, initially, formation of glutamine which is subsequently utilized for mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthesis [P. M. Anderson and C. A. Casey (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 456-462]. The purpose of this study was to determine if the glutamine synthetase catalyzing this first step in urea synthesis has properties uniquely related to this function. Glutamine synthetase has been highly purified from isolated liver mitochondria of Squalus acanthias, a representative elasmobranch. The purified enzyme has a molecular weight of approximately 400,000 in the presence of Mg2+, MgATP, and L-glutamate, but dissociates reversibly to a species with a molecular weight of approximately 200,000 in the absence of MgATP and L-glutamate. Association with the glutamine- and acetylglutamate-dependent carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, also located in the mitochondria, could not be demonstrated. The subunit molecular weight is approximately 46,000. The pH optimum of the biosynthesis reaction is 7.1-7.4. The purified enzyme is stabilized by MgATP and glutamate and by ethylene glycol, and is activated by 5-10% ethylene glycol. The apparent Km values for MgATP, L-glutamate, and ammonia (NH4+-NH3) are 0.7, 11.0, and 0.015 mM, respectively. Mg2+ in excess of that required to complex ATP as MgATP is required for maximal activity; Mn2+ cannot replace Mg2+. The enzyme is activated by low concentrations of chloride, bromide, or iodide; this effect appears to be related to decreases in the apparent Km for glutamate. The enzyme is inhibited by physiological concentrations of urea, but is not significantly affected by physiological concentrations of trimethylamine-N-oxide. Except for activation by halogen anions and the very low apparent Km for ammonia, this elasmobranch glutamine synthetase has properties similar to those reported for mammalian and avian glutamine synthetases. The very low apparent Km for ammonia may be specifically related to the unique role of this glutamine synthetase in mitochondrial assimilation of ammonia for urea synthesis.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Control of glutamine synthesis in rat liver   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. On perfusion of livers from fed rats with a semi-synthetic medium containing no added amino acids there is a rapid release of glutamine during the first 15min (15.6+/-0.8mumol/h per g wet wt.; mean+/-s.e.m. of 35 experiments), followed by a low linear rate of production (3.6+/-0.3mumol/h per g wet wt.; mean+/-s.e.m. of three experiments). The rapid initial release can be accounted for as wash-out of preexisting intracellular glutamine. 2. Addition of readily permeating substrates, or substrate combinations, giving rise to intracellular glutamate or ammonia, or both, did not appreciably increase the rate of glutamine production over the endogenous rate. The maximum rate obtained was from proline plus alanine; even then the rate represented less than one-fortieth of the capacity of glutamine synthetase measured in vitro. 3. Complete inhibition of respiration in the perfusions [no erythrocytes in the medium; 1mm-cyanide; N(2)+CO(2) (95:5) in the gas phase] or perfusion with glutamine synthetase inhibitors [l-methionine dl-sulphoximine; dl-(+)-allo-delta-hydroxylysine] abolishes the low linear rate of glutamine synthesis, but not the initial rapid release of glutamine. 4. In livers from 48h-starved rats initial release (0-15min) of glutamine was decreased (10.6+/-1.1mumol/h per g wet wt.; mean+/-s.e.m. of 11 experiments) and the subsequent rate of glutamine production was lower than in livers from fed rats. Again proline plus alanine was the only substrate combination giving an increase significantly above the endogenous rate. 5. The rate of glutamine synthesis de novo by the liver is apparently unrelated to the tissue content of glutamate or ammonia. 6. The blood glutamine concentration is increased by 50% within 1h of elimination of the liver from the circulation of rats in vivo. 7. There is an output of glutamine by the brain under normal conditions; the mean arterio-venous difference for six rats was 0.023mumol/ml. 8. The high potential activity of liver glutamine synthetase appears to be inhibited by some unknown mechanism: the function of the liver under normal conditions is probably the disposal of glutamine produced by extrahepatic tissues.  相似文献   

15.
In our previous work, we found that perfusion of the rat cerebral cortex with hypo-osmotic medium triggers massive release of the excitatory amino acid L-glutamate but decreases extracellular levels of L-glutamine (R. E. Haskew-Layton et al., PLoS ONE, 3: e3543). The release of glutamate was linked to activation of volume-regulated anion channels, whereas mechanism(s) responsible for alterations in extracellular glutamine remained unclear. When mannitol was added to the hypo-osmotic medium to reverse reductions in osmolarity, changes in microdialysate levels of glutamine were prevented, indicating an involvement of cellular swelling. As the main source of brain glutamine is astrocytic synthesis and export, we explored the impact of hypo-osmotic medium on glutamine synthesis and transport in rat primary astrocyte cultures. In astrocytes, a 40% reduction in medium osmolarity moderately stimulated the release of L-[(3) H]glutamine by ~twofold and produced no changes in L-[(3) H]glutamine uptake. In comparison, hypo-osmotic medium stimulated the release of glutamate (traced with D-[(3) H]aspartate) by more than 20-fold. In whole-cell enzymatic assays, we discovered that hypo-osmotic medium caused a 20% inhibition of astrocytic conversion of L-[(3) H]glutamate into L-[(3) H]glutamine by glutamine synthetase. Using an HPLC assay, we further found a 35% reduction in intracellular levels of endogenous glutamine. Overall, our findings suggest that cellular swelling (i) inhibits astrocytic glutamine synthetase activity, and (ii) reduces substrate availability for this enzyme because of the activation of volume-regulated anion channels. These combined effects likely lead to reductions in astrocytic glutamine export in vivo and may partially explain occurrence of hyperexcitability and seizures in human hyponatremia.  相似文献   

16.
1. In isolated perfused rat liver maximal rates of 2-[1-14C]oxoglutarate uptake were about 0.4 mumol.g-1 .min-1; half-maximal rates of 2-[14C]oxoglutarate uptake were observed with influent concentrations of about 100 microM. 2-[14C]Oxoglutarate uptake by the liver was not affected by the direction of perfusion, but was decreased by about 80-90% when Na+ in the perfusion fluid was substituted by choline+, suggesting a Na+-dependence of hepatic 2-oxoglutarate uptake. In the absence of added ammonia, [14C]oxoglutarate uptake by the liver was about twice the net oxoglutarate uptake, indicating a simultaneous release of unlabeled oxoglutarate from perfused rat liver. 2. 14C-Labeled metabolites derived from [1-14C]oxoglutarate and recovered in the effluent perfusate were 14CO2 and 14C-labeled glutamate and glutamine; they accounted for 85-100% of the radiolabel taken up by the liver. 14CO2 was the major product (more than 70%) from [1-14C]oxoglutarate taken up the liver, provided glutamine synthesis was either inhibited by methionine sulfoximine or the endogenous rate of glutamine production was below 40 nmol.g-1.min-1. 3. Stimulation of glutamine synthesis by ammonia did not affect [14C]oxoglutarate uptake by the liver, but considerably increased net hepatic oxoglutarate uptake, indicating a decreased release of unlabeled oxoglutarate from the liver. Stepwise stimulation of hepatic glutamine synthesis led to a gradual decrease of 14CO2 production and radiolabel was recovered increasingly as [14C]glutamine in the effluent. At high rates of glutamine formation (i.e. about 0.6 mumol.g-1.min-1), about 60% of the [1-14C]oxoglutarate taken up by the liver was recovered in the effluent as [14C]glutamine. 14CO2 and [14C]glutamine production from added [1-14C]oxoglutarate were dependent on the rate of hepatic glutamine synthesis but not on the direction of perfusion. Extrapolation of 14C incorporation into glutamine to maximal rates of hepatic glutamine synthesis yielded an about 100% utilization of the [14C]oxoglutarate taken up by the liver for glutamine synthesis. This was again true for both the antegrade and the retrograde perfusion directions. On the other hand, addition of ammonia did not affect 14CO2 production from labeled oxoglutarate, when glutamine synthetase was inhibited by methionine sulfoximine. 4. The data suggest that vascular oxoglutarate is almost exclusively taken up by the small perivenous hepatocyte population containing glutamine synthetase, i.e. a cell population comprising only 6-7% of all hepatocytes. Thus, the findings demonstrate the existence of a, to date, uniquely zonally distributed oxoglutarate transport system which is probably Na+-dependent in the plasma membrane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
L-[amide-13N]glutamine in Neurospora crassa is metabolized to [13N]glutamate by glutamate synthase and to [13N]ammonium by the glutamine transaminase-omega-amidase pathway. The [13N]ammonium released is assimilated by glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase, confirming the operation of a glutamine cycle. Most of the nitrogen is retained during cycling between glutamate and glutamine.  相似文献   

18.
A pathway from enteral L-glutamine as substrate for L-arginine synthesis is suggested by previous studies. L-Glutamine and L-glutamine dipeptides exhibit numerous beneficial effects in experimental and clinical studies. In trauma patients, enteral L-glutamine supply increased plasma L-arginine. The present study was designed to quantify the contribution of L-glutamine to the de novo L-citrulline and L-arginine synthesis in mice when L-glutamine is administered in a high dose of labeled L-glutamine or L-alanyl-L-glutamine by the enteral or parenteral route. For this purpose, male Swiss mice (n = 43) underwent a laparotomy, and catheters were inserted for sampling and infusion. A primed, constant, and continuous infusion of L-alanyl-L-[2-(15)N]glutamine (dipeptide groups) or L-[2-(15)N]glutamine (free L-glutamine groups), simultaneously with L-[ureido-(13)C,(2)H(2)]citrulline and L-[guanidino-(15)N(2),(2)H(2)]arginine, was given (steady-state model). Mice received the L-glutamine tracers intravenously (jugular vein) or enterally (duodenum). Enrichments of metabolites were measured by LC-MS. Arterial L-glutamine concentrations were the highest in the intravenous dipeptide group. L-Glutamine was converted to L-citrulline and L-arginine when L-[2-(15)N]glutamine and L-alanyl-L-[2-(15)N]glutamine were given by enteral or parenteral route. The contribution of L-glutamine to the de novo synthesis of L-citrulline and L-arginine was higher in the enteral groups when compared with the intravenous groups (P < 0.005). Therefore, the route of administration (enteral or parenteral) affects the contribution of L-glutamine, provided as free molecule or dipeptide, to the de novo synthesis of L-arginine in mice.  相似文献   

19.
To test the significance of the purine nucleotide cycle in renal ammoniagenesis, studies were conducted with rat kidney cortical slices using glutamate or glutamine labelled in the alpha-amino group with 15N. Glucose production by normal kidney slices with 2 mM-glutamine was equal to that with 3 mM-glutamate. With L-[15N]glutamate as sole substrate, one-third of the total ammonia produced by kidney slices was labelled, indicating significant deamination of glutamate or other amino acids from the cellular pool. Ammonia produced from the amino group of L-[alpha-15N]glutamine was 4-fold higher than from glutamate at similar glucose production rates. Glucose and ammonia formation from glutamine by kidney slices obtained from rats with chronic metabolic acidosis was found to be 70% higher than by normal kidney slices. The contribution of the amino group of glutamine to total ammonia production was similar in both types of kidneys. No 15N was found in the amino group of adenine nucleotides after incubation of kidney slices from normal or chronically acidotic rats with labelled glutamine. Addition of Pi, a strong inhibitor of AMP deaminase, had no effect on ammonia formation from glutamine. Likewise, fructose, which may induce a decrease in endogenous Pi, had no effect on ammonia formation. The data obtained suggest that the contribution of the purine nucleotide cycle to ammonia formation from glutamine in rat renal tissue is insignificant.  相似文献   

20.
The metabolic fate of 13N-labeled ammonia in rat brain.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
13N-labeled ammonia was used to study the cerebral uptake and metabolism of ammonia in conscious rats. After infusion of physiological concentrations of [13N]ammonia for 10 min via one internal carotid artery, the relative specific activities of glutamate, glutamine (alpha-amino), and glutamine (amide) in brain were approximately 1:5:400, respectively. The data are consistent with the concept that ammonia, entering the brain from the blood, is metabolized in a small pool of glutamate that is both rapidly turning over and distinct from a larger tissue glutamate pool (Berl, S., Takagaki, G., Clarke, D.D., and Waelsch, H. (1962) J. Biol. Chem. 237, 2562-2569). Analysis of 13N-metabolites, after infusion of [13N]ammonia into one lateral cerebral ventricle, indicated that ammonia entering the brain from the cerebrospinal fluid is also metabolized in a small glutamate pool. Pretreatment of rats with methionine sulfoximine led to a decrease in the label present in brain glutamine (amide) following carotid artery infusion of [13N]ammonia. On the other hand, 13N activity in brain glutamate was greater than that in the alpha-amino group of glutamine, i.e. following methionine sulfoximine treatment the expected precursor-product relationship was observed, indicating that the two pools of glutamate in the brain were no longer metabolically distinct. The amount of label recovered in the right cerebral hemisphere, 5 s after a rapid bolus injection of [13N]ammonia via the right common carotid artery, was found to be independent of ammonia concentration within the bolus over a 1000-fold range. This finding indicates that ammonia enters the brain from the blood largely by diffusion. In normal rats that were killed by a freeze-blowing technique 5 s after injection of an [13N]ammonia bolus, approximately 60% of the label recovered in brain had already been incorporated into glutamine, indicating that the t1/2 for conversion of ammonia to glutamine in the small pool is in the range of 1 to 3 s or less. The data emphasize the importance of the small pool glutamine synthetase as a metabolic trap for the detoxification of blood-borne and endogenously produced brain ammonia. The possibility that the astrocytes represent the anatomical site of the small pool is considered.  相似文献   

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