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1.
1. The rates of gluconeogenesis from many precursors have been measured in the perfused rat liver and, for comparison, in rat liver slices. All livers were from rats starved for 48hr. Under optimum conditions the rates in perfused liver were three to five times those found under optimum conditions in slices. 2. Rapid gluconeogenesis (rates of above 0·5μmole/g./min.) were found with lactate, pyruvate, alanine, serine, proline, fructose, dihydroxyacetone, sorbitol, xylitol. Unexpectedly other amino acids, notably glutamate and aspartate, and the intermediates of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (with the exception of oxaloacetate), reacted very slowly and were not readily removed from the perfusion medium, presumably because of permeability barriers which prevent the passage of highly charged negative ions. Glutamine and asparagine formed glucose more readily than the corresponding amino acids. 3. Glucagon increased the rate of gluconeogenesis from lactate and pyruvate but not from any other precursor tested. This occurred when the liver was virtually completely depleted of glycogen. Two sites of action of glucagon must therefore be postulated: one concerned with mobilization of liver glycogen, the other with the promotion of gluconeogenesis. Sliced liver did not respond to glucagon. 4. Pyruvate and oxaloacetate formed substantial quantities of lactate on perfusion, which indicates that the reducing power provided in the cytoplasm was in excess of the needs of gluconeogenesis. 5. Values for the content of intermediary metabolites of gluconeogenesis in the perfused liver are reported. The values for most intermediates rose on addition of lactate. 6. The rates of gluconeogenesis from lactate and pyruvate were not affected by wide variations of the lactate/pyruvate ratio in the perfusion medium.  相似文献   

2.
The urea cycle in the liver of adjuvant-induced arthritic rats was investigated using the isolated perfused liver. Urea production in livers from arthritic rats was decreased during substrate-free perfusion and also in the presence of the following substrates: alanine, alanine + ornithine, ammonia, ammonia + lactate, ammonia + pyruvate and glutamine but increased when arginine and citrulline + aspartate were the substrates. No differences were found with ammonia + aspartate, ammonia + aspartate + glutamate, aspartate, aspartate + glutamate and citrulline. Ammonia consumption was smaller in the arthritic condition when the substance was infused together with lactate or pyruvate but higher when the substance was simultaneously infused with aspartate or aspartate + glutamate. Glucose production tended to correlate with the smaller or higher rates of urea synthesis. Blood urea was higher in arthritic rats (+25.6%), but blood ammonia was lower (–32.2%). Critical for the synthesis of urea from various substrates in arthritic rats seems to be the availability of aspartate, whose production in the liver is probably limited by both the reduced gluconeogenesis and aminotransferase activities. This is indicated by urea synthesis which was never inferior in the arthritic condition when aspartate was exogenously supplied, being even higher when both aspartate and citrulline were simultaneously present. Possibly, the liver of arthritic rats has a different substrate supply of nitrogenous compounds. This could be in the form of different concentrations of aspartate or other aminoacids such as citrulline or arginine (from the kidneys) which allow higher rates of hepatic ureogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
ADENOSINE (0.5 MM) added to hepatocyte suspensions increased the intracellular concentration of ATP and total adenine nucleotides within 60 min up to three-fold. 2. Adenosine at 0.5 mM inhibited gluconeogenesis from lactate by about 50%. At higher adenosine concentrations the inhibition was less. There was no strict parallelism between the time-course of the increase of the adenine nucleotide content and the time-course of the inhibition of gluconeogenesis from lactate. 3. Adenosine abolished the accelerating effects of oleate and dibutyryl cyclic AMP on gluconeogenesis from lactate. 4. Gluconeogenesis was no significant effect of adenosine with fructose, dihydroxyacetone or glycerol. With asparagine, adenosine caused anacceleration of glucose formation. 5. Adenosine incorporation into adenine nucleotides accounted for about 20% of the adenosine removal. 6. Inosine, hypoxanthine or adenine compared with adenosine gave relatively slight increases of adenine nucleotides. 7. Urea synthesis from NH4Cl under optimum conditions i.e. in the presence of ornithine, lactate and oleate, was also inhibited by adenosine. The inhibition increased with the adenosine concentration and was 65% at 4 mM-adenosine. Again there was no correlation between the degree of inhibition of urea synthesis and the increase in the adenine nucleotide content. 8. The basal O2 consumption, the increased O2 consumption on the addition of oleate and the rate of formation of ketone bodies were not affected by the addition of adenosine. The [beta-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio was increased by adenosine, provided that lactate was present. 9. The increase of the adenine nucleotide content of the hepatocytes on the addition of adenosine may be explained on the assumption that adenosine kinase is not regulated by feedback but by substrate supply.  相似文献   

4.
1. The rate of gluconeogenesis from alanine in the perfused rat liver is affected by the presence of other metabolizable substances, especially fatty acids, ornithine and ethanol. Gluconeogenesis is accelerated by oleate and by ornithine. When both oleate and ornithine were present the acceleration was greater than expected on the basis of mere additive effects. 2. Much NH(3) and some urea were formed from alanine when no ornithine was added. With ornithine almost all the nitrogen released from alanine appeared as urea. 3. Lactate was a major product of alanine metabolism. Addition of oleate, and especially of oleate plus ornithine, decreased lactate formation. 4. Ethanol had no major effect on gluconeogenesis from alanine when this was the sole added precursor. Gluconeogenesis was strongly inhibited (87%) when oleate was also added, but ethanol greatly accelerated gluconeogenesis when ornithine was added together with alanine. 5. In the absence of ethanol the alanine carbon and alanine nitrogen removed were essentially recovered in the form of glucose, lactate, pyruvate, NH(3) and urea. 6. In the presence of ethanol the balance of both alanine carbon and alanine nitrogen showed substantial deficits. These deficits were largely accounted for by the formation of aspartate and glutamine, the formation of which was increased two- to three-fold. 7. When alanine was replaced by lactate plus NH(4)Cl, ethanol also caused a major accumulation of amino acids, especially of aspartate and alanine. 8. Earlier apparently discrepant results on the effects of ethanol on gluconeogenesis from alanine are explained by the fact that under well defined conditions ethanol can inhibit, or accelerate, or be without major effect on the rate of gluconeogenesis. 9. It is pointed out that in the synthesis of urea through the ornithine cycle half of the nitrogen must be supplied in the form of asparate and half in the form of carbamoyl phosphate. The accumulation of aspartate and other amino acids suggests that ethanol interferes with the control mechanisms which regulate the stoicheiometric formation of aspartate and carbamoyl phosphate.  相似文献   

5.
1. In hepatocytes isolated from 24 h-starved rats, urea production from ammonia was stimulated by addition of lactate, in both the presence and the absence of ornithine. The relationship of lactate concentration to the rate of urea synthesis was hyperbolic. 2. Other glucose precursors also stimulated urea production to varying degrees, but none more than lactate. Added oleate and butyrate did not stimulate urea synthesis. 3. Citrulline accumulation was largely dependent on ornithine concentration. As ornithine was increased from 0 to 40 mM, the rate of citrulline accumulation increased hyperbolically, and was half-maximal when ornithine was 8-12 mM. 4. The rate of citrulline accumulation was independent of the presence of lactate, but with pyruvate the rate increased. 5. The rate of urea production continued to increase as ornithine was varied from 0 to 40 mM. 6. It was concluded that intermediates provided by both ornithine and lactate are limiting for urea production from ammonia in isolated liver cells. It was suggested that the stimulatory effect of lactate lies in increased availability of cytosolic aspartate for condensation with citrulline.  相似文献   

6.
1. Two-day-old rats were exposed at constant temperature to atmospheres containing air and nitrogen with the air content varied in steps from 100 to 0%. By using this system of graded hypoxia a comparison was made between rates of gluconeogenesis from lactate, serine and aspartate in the whole animal and the concentrations of several liver metabolites. 2. Gluconeogenesis, expressed as the percentage incorporation of labelled isotope into glucose plus glycogen, proceeds linearly for 30min when the animals are incubated in a normal air atmosphere, but is completely suppressed if the atmosphere is 100% nitrogen. 3. Preincubation of animals for between 5 and 30min under an atmosphere containing 19% air results in the attainment of a new steady state with respect to gluconeogenesis and hepatic concentrations of ATP, ADP, AMP, lactate, pyruvate, beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate. 4. When lactate (100mumol), aspartate (20mumol) or serine (20mumol) was injected, it was shown that the more severe the hypoxia the greater the depression of gluconeogenesis. Under conditions when gluconeogenesis was markedly inhibited there were no changes in the degree of phosphorylation of hepatic adenine nucleotides, but free [NAD(+)]/[NADH] ratios fell in both cytosol and mitochondrial compartments of the liver cell. 5. Measurements of total liver NAD(+) and NADH showed that the concentrations of these nucleotide coenzymes changed less with anoxia, in comparison with the concentration ratio of free coenzymes. 6. Calculations showed that the difference in NAD(+)-NADH redox potentials between mitochondrial and cytosol compartments increased with the severity of hypoxia. 7. From the constancy of the concentrations of adenine nucleotides it is concluded that liver of hypoxic rats can conserve ATP by lowering the rate of ATP utilization for gluconeogenesis. Gluconeogenesis may be regulated in turn by the changes in mitochondrial and cytosol redox state.  相似文献   

7.
The transaminase inhibitor l-2-amino-4-methoxy-trans-3-butenoic acid (AMB) decreased aspartate aminotransferase activity by approximately two-thirds in isolated rat liver mitohondria incubated with succinate, ammonia, and ornithine. Aspartate production by the mitochondria was unaffected over the 30-min incubation period, indicating that mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase activity is normally far in excess of that required for maximal rates of aspartate production. In rat hepatocytes incubated with lactate, ammonia, and ornithine the inhibition of both the cytosolic and mitochondrial isozymes of aspartate aminotransferase by AMB was partially blocked by the presence of ammonia and ornithine. When pyruvate was substituted for lactate as a carbon source with isolated hepatocytes, the presence of ammonia and ornithine blocked the inhibition by AMB of the mitochondrial but not the cytosolic isozyme of aspartate aminotransferase. Urea formation by cells incubated with lactate, ammonia, and ornithine was unaffected by AMB unless the cells were preincubated with the inhibitor prior to the addition of substrates. However, urea formation by cells incubated in the presence of pyruvate, ammonia, and ornithine was inhibited strongly by AMB even without preincubation. The results suggest that the stimulation of ureogenesis from ammonia and ornithine by pyruvate involves the cytosolic isozyme of aspartate aminotransferase. In contrast, the stimulation of ureogenesis elicited by lactate primarily involved mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase.  相似文献   

8.
During periods of nitrogen exportation from the cell, mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate is synthesized, thus initiating the urea cycle. During times of nitrogen conservation by the liver cell, carbamoyl phosphate is synthesized in the cytosol of the cell, whereupon the de novo pyrimidine synthesis pathway is initiated. The de novo pathway provides pyrimidines for increased ribonucleic acid synthesis. Formerly, it was believed that these two pathways functioned irrespective of one another. However, recent experimental evidence indicates that, when excess ammonia is present, mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate passes from the mitochondria into the cell cytosol, where it is metabolized by the de novo pyrimidine synthesis pathway. When ornithine and excess ammonia are both present, mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate no longer passes from the mitochondria into the cytosol to be metabolized by the de nova pathway. Thus the metabolic fate of mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate, and that of excess nitrogen, is determined by the presence or absence of ornithine. In turn, this key molecule is the substrate for the cytoplasmic enzyme ornithine decarboxylase. When ornithine decarboxylase is stimulated by insulin, ornithine is metabolized to putrescine. The activated ornithine decarboxylase combines with ribonucleic acid polymerase, activating the later enzyme. When ornithine is acted upon by ornithine decarboxylase, it is no longer available for the perpetuation of the urea cycle and mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate levels rise until the carbamoyl phosphate passes into the cytosol to be metabolized by the de novo pathway. Increased amounts of pyrimidines are available for the activated ribonucleic acid polymerase. Therefore insulin, through its stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase, achieves cellular nitrogen retention by regulating nitrogen incorporation into newly synthesized ribonucleic acid.  相似文献   

9.
1. The changes in the metabolite content in the isolated perfused rat liver and in the perfusion medium were measured after loading the liver with glycerol or dihydroxyacetone. 2. Glycerol was rapidly taken up by livers from fed and starved rats; glucose, lactate and pyruvate were discharged into the medium. The [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio in the medium rose from 10 to 30 and in the tissue from 9.6 to 36.6. 3. The most striking effects of glycerol loading were: (i) the accumulation in the liver of alpha-glycerophosphate, which increased from 0.13 to 8.45mumol/g at 40min; (ii) the decrease in the concentration of adenine nucleotides to 70% of the control value at 40min. 4. The P(i) content of the tissue also fell, from 4.25 to 2.31mumol/g at 10min, but the sum of the phosphates measured rose from the normal value of 13.8 to 18.8mumol/g at 40min, because of an uptake of P(i) from the medium. 5. Omission of phosphate from the standard perfusion medium increased the depletion of adenine nucleotides on glycerol loading. 6. Dihydroxyacetone was more rapidly metabolized than glycerol. Again glucose, lactate and pyruvate were the main products. The [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio remained below 10. 7. Dihydroxyacetone caused an increase of the fructose 1-phosphate content from 0.23 to 0.39mumol/g at 10min. The adenine nucleotide content of the tissue was not significantly decreased by dihydroxyacetone loading. 8. The rate of removal of both glycerol and dihydroxyacetone was about 60% greater in the livers from fed than in those from starved animals. 9. The results extend previous findings by Burch et al. (1970), who administered glycerol and dihydroxyacetone intraperitoneally.  相似文献   

10.
The relationship between intra- and extramitochondrial ATP utilization was investigated in liver mitochondria isolated from normally fed, starved and high-protein fed rats. ATP export was provoked by adding a hexokinase-glucose-trap and intramitochondrial ATP consumption by adding ammonia, bicarbonate and ornithine in order to stimulate citrulline synthesis. Both processes compete for ATP produced via oxidative phosphorylation; the rate of citrulline formation declines as the extramitochondrial [ATP]/[ADP] ratio decreases. It is concluded that ATP for adenine nucleotide translocation and that for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis are delivered from a common intramitochondrial pool of adenine nucleotides. In mitochondria from rats with a high-protein diet, citrulline synthesis greatly stimulates the rate of oxidative phosphorylation (about two thirds of state 3 respiration). Under these conditions the intramitochondrial [ATP]/[ADP] ratio is significantly reduced. The intramitochondrial [ATP]/[ADP] ratio is not in thermodynamic equilibrium with the extramitochondrial one.  相似文献   

11.
Urea synthesis was studied using the isolated liver perfusion with ammonium cholride and glutamine as nitrogen sources. The rate of urea formation increases with ammonium cholorde concentration up to 5mM, and the rate remained constant in the range between 5 and 20mM of ammonium chloride as the substrate. The concentration of ammonia in the medium to support the half-maximum velocity of urea formation was 0.7mM. The rate of urea formation was stimulated by the addition of 2.5mM ornithine, and the greater part of the ornithine which was taken up into the liver was accumulated as citrulline in the presence of ammonia. A considerable accelerating effect of N-acetylglutamate on the synthetic rate was observed, but a rather high concentration of N-acetylglutamate was required in order to obtain the maximum effect possibly, because its permeability into liver cells may be limited. A marked additive effect on the rate of urea formation was observed with the combined addition of ornithine and N-acetylglutamate. The metabolic conversion of glutamine nitrogen to urea in the perfused rat liver and the effect of several compounds which stimulated urea synthesis with ammonia were further examined. The process of conversion of glutamine nitrogen to urea might be composed of the following three steps. In the first lag phase, a small amount of glutamine was removed from the medium. In the second stage, the glutamine level decreased rapidly and ammonia was accumulated in the perfusate. The third stage was a period in which glutamine concentration remained at a constant low level, and the accumulated ammonia was rapidly conversed to urea. The rate of urea formation in this third stage was found to be much higher than that with ammonia as the substrate. The maximum rate of glutamine removal was obtained at pH 7.7 of the perfusate and at a concentration of 10mM glutamine. Urea formation with glutamine was also stimulated by the addition of ornithine, malate, or N-acetylglutamate, which had accelerating effects on the urea synthesis with ammonia. This stimulation was due to an effective conversion of ammonia to urea, but no change in the rate of removal glutamine was obtained.  相似文献   

12.
The rate at which isolated rat liver mitochondria synthesized citrulline with NH4C1 as nitrogen source was markedly dependent on the protein content of the diet. 2. Citrulline synthesis was not rate-limited by substrate concentration, substrate transport or ornithine transcarbamoylase activity under the conditions used. 3. The intramitochondrial content of an activator of carbamoyl phosphate synthase, assumed to be N-acetyl-glutamate, varied markedly with dietary protein content. The variation in the concentration of this activator was sufficient to account for the observed variation in the rates of citrulline synthesis if this synthesis were rate-limited by the activity of carbamoyl phosphate synthase. 4. The rates of urea formation from NH4Cl as nitrogen source in isolated liver cells showed variations in response to diet that closely paralleled the variations in the rates of citrulline synthesis observed in isolated mitochondria. 5. These results are consistent with the postulate that when NH4Cl plus ornithine are present in an excess, the rate of urea synthesis is regulated at the level of carbamoyl phosphate synthase activity.  相似文献   

13.
Control of ureogenesis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Control of urea synthesis was studied in rat hepatocytes incubated with physiological mixtures of amino acids in which arginine was replaced by equimolar amounts of ornithine. The following observations were made. Intramitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate was always below 0.1 mM. Only when ornithine was absent and when, in addition, the concentration of amino acids was higher than four times their plasma concentration, intramitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate rose up to about 3 mM; under these conditions ammonia accumulated in the medium. The relationship between ornithine-cycle flux and the concentration of the cycle intermediates at varying amino acid concentration indicated that under near-physiological conditions the ornithine-cycle enzymes are far from being saturated with their subsidiaries. Moderate concentrations of norvaline had no effect on the rate of urea synthesis unless the cells were severely depleted of ornithine. Activation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (ammonia) by addition of N-carbamoylglutamate only slightly stimulated urea production at all amino acid concentrations. However, in the presence of the activator the curve relating ornithine-cycle flux to the steady-state ammonia concentration was shifted to lower concentrations of ammonia. The intramitochondrial concentration of carbamoyl phosphate in rat liver in vivo was below 0.1 mM. This value is far below the concentration required for substantial inhibition of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. It is concluded that in vivo the function of activity changes in carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase, via the well-documented alterations in the intramitochondrial concentration of N-acetylglutamate, is to buffer the intrahepatic ammonia concentration rather than to affect urea production per se. At constant concentration of ammonia the rate of urea production is entirely controlled by the activity of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The submitochondrial localization of the four mitochondrial enzymes associated with urea synthesis in liver of Squalus acanthias (spiny dogfish), a representative elasmobranch, was determined. Glutamine- and acetylglutamate-dependent carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase, glutamine synthetase, and arginase were all localized within the matrix of liver mitochondria. The subcellular and submitochondrial localization and activities of several related enzymes involved in nitrogen metabolism and gluconeogenesis in liver and dogfish are also reported. Pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase were localized in the mitochondrial matrix. Synthesis of citrulline by isolated mitochondria from ornithine proceeds at a near optimal rate at ornithine concentrations as low as 0.08 mM. The same stoichiometry and rates of citrulline synthesis are observed when ornithine is replaced by arginine. The mitochondrial location of arginase does not appear to reflect a mechanism for regulating ornithine availability.  相似文献   

16.
1. The influence of ammonia and ornithine on the oxygen uptake and the formation of citrulline was investigated with isolated rat liver mitochondria. The experiments were performed in a cytosol-like saline medium at 38 degrees C. 2. Under these conditions an increase of the respiration rate by ammonia and ornithine was observed, but a small response to external ADP, only. The missing stimulation by ADP was due to a partial inhibition of the respiratory chain by traces of zinc (approximately 1 microM) present in the medium. This inhibition was only detected at low concentrations of mitochondria. 3. For activation of respiration by ammonia plus ornithine two different processes were responsible: (i) chelation of the inhibiting zinc by ornithine, which could be prevented by EDTA; (ii) ADP production in the matrix space during formation of carbamoyl phosphate, which could be prevented by oligomycin but not by carboxyatractyloside. 4. This stimulus of the carbamoyl phosphate formation and of the equivalent citrulline synthesis on the mitochondrial respiration ran to 12% of that increase caused by phosphorylation of external ADP. The maximum rate of citrulline formation was limited by the activity of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 5. Added ADP suppresses the production of citrulline probably by the exchange of extramitochondrial ADP versus intramitochondrial ATP. The data suggest a common adenine nucleotide pool delivering ATP to the adenine nucleotide translocase as well as to the carbamoyl phosphate synthetase.  相似文献   

17.
Bioartificial livers (BALs) are bioreactors containing liver cells that provide extracorporeal liver support to liver‐failure patients. Theoretically, the plasma perfusion flow rate through a BAL is an important determinant of its functionality. Low flow rates can limit functionality due to limited substrate availability, and high flow rates can induce cell damage. This hypothesis was tested by perfusing the AMC‐BAL loaded with the liver cell line HepaRG at four different medium flow rates (0.3, 1.5, 5, and 10 mL/min). Hepatic functions ammonia elimination, urea production, lactate consumption, and 6β‐hydroxylation of testosterone showed 2–20‐fold higher rates at 5 mL/min compared to 0.3 mL/min, while cell damage remained stable. However, at 10 mL/min cell damage was twofold higher, and maximal hepatic functionality was not changed, except for an increase in lactate elimination. On the other hand, only a low flow rate of 0.3 mL/min allowed for an accurate measurement of the ammonia and lactate mass balance across the bioreactor, which is useful for monitoring the BAL's condition during treatment. These results show that (1) the functionality of a BAL highly depends on the perfusion rate; (2) there is a universal optimal flow rate based on various function and cell damage parameters (5 mL/min for HepaRG‐BAL); and (3) in the current set‐up the mass balance of substrate, metabolite, or cell damage markers between in‐and out‐flow of the bioreactor can only be determined at a suboptimal, low, perfusion rate (0.3 mL/min for HepaRG‐BAL). Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2012; 109: 3182–3188. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Sources of ammonia for mammalian urea synthesis.   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The initial rate of incorporation of [15N]alanine into the 6-amino group of the adenine nucleotides in rat hepatocytes was about one-eighteenth of the rate of incorporation into urea. Thus the purine nucleotide cycle cannot provide most of the ammonia needed in urea synthesis for the carbamoyl phosphate synthase reaction (EC 2.7.2.5). On the other hand, contrary to the view expressed by McGivan & Chappell [(1975) FEBS Lett. 52, 1--7], the experiments support the view that hepatic glutamate dehydrogenase can supply the required ammonia.  相似文献   

19.
Rates of urea synthesis were determined in periportal and pericentral regions of the liver lobule in perfused liver from fed, phenobarbital-treated rats by measuring the extra O2 consumed upon infusion of NH4Cl with miniature O2 electrodes and from decreases in NADPH fluorescence detected with micro-light-guides. Urea synthesis by the perfused rat liver supplemented with lactate (5 mM), ornithine (2 mM) and methionine sulfoximine (0.15 mM), an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, was stimulated by stepwise infusion of NH4Cl at doses ranging from 0.24 mM to 3.0 mM. A good correlation (r = 0.92) between decreases in NADPH fluorescence and urea production was observed when the NH4Cl concentration was increased. Sublobular rates of O2 uptake were determined by placing miniature oxygen electrodes on periportal or pericentral regions of the lobule on the liver surface, stopping the flow and measuring decreases in oxygen tension. From such measurements local rates of O2 uptake were calculated in the presence and absence of NH4Cl and local rates of urea synthesis were calculated from the extra O2 consumed in the presence of NH4Cl and the stoichiometry between O2 uptake and urea formation. Rates of urea synthesis were also estimated from the fractional decrease in NADPH fluorescence, caused by NH4Cl infusion in each region, measured with micro-light-guides and the rate of urea synthesis by the whole organ. When perfusion was in the anterograde direction, maximal rates of urea synthesis, calculated from changes in fluorescence, were 177 +/- 31 mumol g-1 h-1 and 61 +/- 24 mumol g-1 h-1 in periportal and pericentral regions, respectively. When perfusion was in the retrograde direction, however, rates were 76 +/- 23 mumol g-1 h-1 in periportal areas and 152 +/- 19 mumol g-1 h-1 in pericentral regions. During perfusion in the anterograde direction, urea synthesis, calculated by changes in O2 uptake, was 307 +/- 76 mumol g-1 h-1 and 72 +/- 34 mumol g-1 h-1 in periportal and pericentral regions, respectively. When perfusion was in the retrograde direction, urea was synthesized at rates of 54 +/- 17 mumol g-1 h-1 and 387 +/- 99 mumol g-1 h-1 in periportal and pericentral regions, respectively. Thus, maximal rates of urea synthesis were dependent upon the direction of perfusion. In addition, rates of urea synthesis were elevated dramatically in periportal regions when the flow rate per gram liver was increased (e.g. 307 versus 177 mumol g-1 h-1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
In the presence of citrulline synthesis, we made the following observations. External ornithine is channeled between its transporter and ornithine transcarbamylase; mitochondria preloaded with cold ornithine, then incubated with [3H]ornithine, produced citrulline of the same specific radioactivity as that of external ornithine, while matrix ornithine remained essentially unlabeled. The channeling of ornithine suggests that some soluble enzymes are organized within the mitochondrial matrix. The rate of ornithine transport can be greater than 80 nmol/min/mg. At rates of carbamyl phosphate synthesis of 10-50 nmol/min/mg, the rate of citrulline synthesis is controlled by external ornithine in the range 0.03-0.2 mM; at greater than or equal to 0.2 mM ornithine, transport is not limiting for citrulline synthesis. At external ornithine concentrations less than or equal to 1 mM, i.e. within the physiological range, this amino acid is undetectable in the matrix. Given the rates of citrulline and urea synthesis which occur in vivo and the concentrations of ornithine present in the liver, our findings indicate that ornithine may contribute to the physiological regulation of urea synthesis. Preliminary reports of parts of this work have been published (Raijman, L., Cheung, C-W., and Cohen, N. S. (1984) Fed. Proc. 43, 1831; Cohen, N. S., Cheung, C-W., and Raijman, L. (1986) Fed. Proc. 45, 2677).  相似文献   

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