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1.
Glutamate exists in a vesicular as well as a cytoplasmic pool and is metabolically closely related to the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Glutamate released during neuronal activity is most likely to a large extent accumulated by astrocytes surrounding the synapse. A compensatory flux from astrocytes to neurons of suitable precursors is obligatory as neurons are incapable of performing a net synthesis of glutamate from glucose. Glutamine appears to play a major role in this context. Employing cultured cerebellar granule cells, as a model system for glutamatergic neurons, details of the biosynthetic machinery have been investigated during depolarizing conditions inducing vesicular release. [U-13C]Glucose and [U-13C]glutamine were used as labeled precursors for monitoring metabolic pathways by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) technologies. To characterize release mechanisms and influence of glutamate transporters on maintenance of homeostasis in the glutamatergic synapse, a quantification was performed by HPLC analysis of the amounts of glutamate and aspartate released in response to depolarization by potassium (55 mM) in the absence and presence of DL-threo-beta-benzyloxyaspartate (TBOA) and in response to L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (t-2,4-PDC), a substrate for the glutamate transporter. Based on labeling patterns of glutamate the biosynthesis of the intracellular pool of glutamate from glutamine was found to involve the TCA cycle to a considerable extent (approximately 50%). Due to the mitochondrial localization of PAG this is unlikely only to reflect amino acid exchange via the cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase reaction. The involvement of the TCA cycle was significantly lower in the synthesis of the released vesicular pool of glutamate. However, in the presence of TBOA, inhibiting glutamate uptake, the difference between the intracellular and the vesicular pool with regard to the extent of involvement of the TCA cycle in glutamate synthesis from glutamine was eliminated. Surprisingly, the intracellular pool of glutamate was decreased after repetitive release from the vesicular pool in the presence of TBOA indicating that neuronal reuptake of released glutamate is involved in the maintenance of the neurotransmitter pool and that 0.5 mM glutamine exogenously supplied is inadequate to sustain this pool.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: A shift in pH from 7.4 to 7.8 in the incubation solution caused a 3.4-fold increase in the free glutamine content of mouse cerebral astrocytes that were incubated with glutamate (100 μ M ) and ammonium (100 μ M ). This large and reversible steady-state increase in glutamine content was accompanied by smaller transient increases in the following: (a) net formation of glutamine; (b) clearance of glutamate from the incubation solution; and (c) glutamate content. The content of glutamine was reduced markedly by omission of either glutamate or ammonium from the incubation solution, or by inhibition of glutamine synthetase activity with methionine sulfoximine. The rate at which glutamine was exported from the astrocytes was unaffected by the pH change. The effects of pH on the concentration of free ammonia or on glutamate uptake do not appear to mediate the increase in glutamine content. Uptake of exogenous glutamine was little affected by the pH change. Therefore, possible mediation of the effect by an increase in intracellular pH must be considered. The response to altered pH described here may provide a cellular basis for the increased level of brain glutamine observed in hyperammonemia.  相似文献   

3.
The first indication of 'metabolic compartmentation' in brain was the demonstration that glutamine after intracisternal [14C]glutamate administration is formed from a compartment of the glutamate pool that comprises at most one-fifth of the total glutamate content in the brain. This pool, which was designated 'the small compartment,' is now known to be made up predominantly or exclusively of astrocytes, which accumulate glutamate avidly and express glutamine synthetase activity, whereas this enzyme is absent from neurons, which eventually were established to constitute 'the large compartment.' During the following decades, the metabolic compartment concept was refined, aided by emerging studies of energy metabolism and glutamate uptake in cellularly homogenous preparations and by the histochemical observations that the two key enzymes glutamine synthetase and pyruvate carboxylase are active in astrocytes but absent in neurons. It is, however, only during the last few years that nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, assisted by previously obtained knowledge of metabolic pathways, has allowed accurate determination in the human brain in situ of actual metabolic fluxes through the neuronal tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, the glial, presumably mainly astrocytic, TCA cycle, pyruvate carboxylation, and the 'glutamate-glutamine cycle,' connecting neuronal and astrocytic metabolism. Astrocytes account for 20% of oxidative metabolism of glucose in the human brain cortex and accumulate the bulk of neuronally released transmitter glutamate, part of which is rapidly converted to glutamine and returned to neurons in the glutamate-glutamine cycle. However, one-third of released transmitter glutamate is replaced by de novo synthesis of glutamate from glucose in astrocytes, suggesting that at steady state a corresponding amount of glutamate is oxidatively degraded. Net degradation of glutamate may not always equal its net production from glucose and enhanced glutamatergic activity, occurring during different types of cerebral stimulation, including the establishment of memory, may be associated with increased de novo synthesis of glutamate. This process may contribute to a larger increase in glucose utilization rate than in rate of oxygen consumption during brain activation. The energy yield in astrocytes from glutamate formation is strongly dependent upon the fate of the generated glutamate.  相似文献   

4.
Respiratory neuronal network activity is thought to require efficient functioning of astrocytes. Here, we analyzed neuron-astrocyte communication in the pre-Bötzinger Complex (preBötC) of rhythmic slice preparations from neonatal mice. In astrocytes that exhibited rhythmic potassium fluxes and glutamate transporter currents, we did not find a translation of respiratory neuronal activity into phase-locked astroglial calcium signals. In up to 20% of astrocytes, 2-photon calcium imaging revealed spontaneous calcium fluctuations, although with no correlation to neuronal activity. Calcium signals could be elicited in preBötC astrocytes by metabotropic glutamate receptor activation or after inhibition of glial glutamate uptake. In the latter case, astrocyte calcium elevation preceded a surge of respiratory neuron discharge activity followed by network failure. We conclude that astrocytes do not exhibit respiratory-rhythmic calcium fluctuations when they are able to prevent synaptic glutamate accumulation. Calcium signaling is, however, observed when glutamate transport processes in astrocytes are suppressed or neuronal discharge activity is excessive.  相似文献   

5.
This study demonstrates that virtually homogenous cultures of mouse cerebral neurons, obtained from 15-day-old embryos, differentiate at least as well as cultures which in addition contain astrocytes. This was indicated by glutamate decarboxylase activity which within 2 weeks rose from a negligible value to twice the level in the adult mouse cerebral cortex, and by a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) uptake rate which quadrupled during the second week in culture and reached higher values than in brain slices. Within the same period, the GABA content increased four to five times to 75 nmol/mg protein, and a potassium-induced increase in [14C]GABA efflux became apparent. Although the development was faster than in vivo, optimum differentiation required maintenance of the cultures beyond the age of 1 week. Uptake and release rates for glutamate and glutamine underwent much less developmental alteration. At no time was there any potassium-induced release of radioactivity after exposure to [14C]glutamate, and the glutamate uptake was only slightly increased during the period of GABAergic development. This indicates that exogenous glutamate is not an important GABA precursor. Similarly, glutamine uptake was unaltered between days 7 and 14, although a small potassium-induced release of radioactivity after loading with glutamine suggests a partial conversion to GABA.  相似文献   

6.
Previous studies have demonstrated that in glia and astrocytes Mn(II) is distributed with ca. 30–40% in the cytoplasm, 60–70% in mitochondria. Ca(II) ions were observed to alter both the flux rates and distribution of Mn(II) ions in primary cultues of chick glia and rat astrocytes. External (influxing) Ca(II) ions had the greatest effect on Mn(II) uptake and efflux, compared to internal (effluxing) or internal-external equilibrated Ca(II) ions. External (influxing) Ca(II) ions inhibited the net rate and extent of Mn(II) uptake but enhanced Mn(II) efflux from mitochondria. These observations differ from Ca(II)–Mn(II) effects previously reported with brain (neuronal) mitochondria. Overall, increased cytoplasmic Ca(II) acts to block Mn(II) uptake and enhance Mn(II) release by mitochondria, which serve to increase the cytoplasmic concentration of free Mn(II). A hypothesis is presented involving external L-glutamate acting through membrane receptors to mobilize cell Ca(II), which in turn causes mitochondrial Mn(II) to be released. Because the concentration of free cytoplasmic Mn(II) is poised near the Kd for Mn(II) with glutamine synthetase, a slight increase in cytoplasmic Mn(II) will directly enhance the activity of glutamine synthetase, which catalyzes removal of neurotoxic glutamate and ammonia.  相似文献   

7.
Neuronal excitability relies on inward sodium and outward potassium fluxes during action potentials. To prevent neuronal hyperexcitability, potassium ions have to be taken up quickly. However, the dynamics of the activity-dependent potassium fluxes and the molecular pathways underlying extracellular potassium homeostasis remain elusive. To decipher the specific and acute contribution of astroglial Kir4.1 channels in controlling potassium homeostasis and the moment to moment neurotransmission, we built a tri-compartment model accounting for potassium dynamics between neurons, astrocytes and the extracellular space. We here demonstrate that astroglial Kir4.1 channels are sufficient to account for the slow membrane depolarization of hippocampal astrocytes and crucially contribute to extracellular potassium clearance during basal and high activity. By quantifying the dynamics of potassium levels in neuron-glia-extracellular space compartments, we show that astrocytes buffer within 6 to 9 seconds more than 80% of the potassium released by neurons in response to basal, repetitive and tetanic stimulations. Astroglial Kir4.1 channels directly lead to recovery of basal extracellular potassium levels and neuronal excitability, especially during repetitive stimulation, thereby preventing the generation of epileptiform activity. Remarkably, we also show that Kir4.1 channels strongly regulate neuronal excitability for slow 3 to 10 Hz rhythmic activity resulting from probabilistic firing activity induced by sub-firing stimulation coupled to Brownian noise. Altogether, these data suggest that astroglial Kir4.1 channels are crucially involved in extracellular potassium homeostasis regulating theta rhythmic activity.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Hydrogenomonas H 16 synthetized two chromatographically distinct forms of glutamate dehydrogenase which differed in their thermolability. One glutamate dehydrogenase utilized NAD, the other NADP as a coenzyme.Low specific activity of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase was found in cells grown with glutamate as sole nitrogen source or in cells grown with a high concentration of ammonium ions. In the presence of a low concentration of ammonium ions or in a nitrogen free medium, the specific activity of the NAD-dependent enzyme increased. Corresponding to the formation of the NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase the enzyme glutamine synthetase was synthesized. The ratio of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase to glutamine synthetase activity differed only slightly in cells grown with different nitrogen and carbon sources.The NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase was found in high specific activity in cells grown with an excess of ammonium ions. Under nitrogen starvation the formation of the NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase ceased and the enzyme activity decreased.  相似文献   

9.
Transfer of glutamine between astrocytes and neurons   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The export of glutamine from astrocytes, and the uptake of glutamine by neurons, are integral steps in the glutamate-glutamine cycle, a major pathway for the replenishment of neuronal glutamate. We review here the functional and molecular identification of the transporters that mediate this transfer. The emerging picture of glutamine transfer in adult brain is of a dominant pathway mediated by system N transport (SN1) in astrocytes and system A transport (SAT/ATA) in neurons. The participating glutamine transporters are functionally and structurally related, sharing the following properties: (a) unlike many neutral amino acid transporters which have proven to be obligate exchangers, these glutamine transporters mediate net substrate transfer energized by coupling to ionic gradients; (b) they are sensitive to small pH changes in the physiological range; (c) they are susceptible to adaptive and humoral regulation; (d) they are related structurally to the AAAP (amino acid and auxin permeases) family of transporters. A key difference between SN1 and the SAT/ATA transporters is the ready reversibility of glutamine fluxes via SN1 under physiological conditions, which allows SN1 both to sustain a glutamine concentration gradient in astrocytes and to mediate the net outward flux of glutamine. It is likely that the ASCT2 transporter, an obligate exchanger of neutral amino acids, displaces the SN1 transporter as the main carrier of glutamine export in proliferating astrocytes.  相似文献   

10.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and glutamine synthetase (GS)-glutamine 2-oxoglutarate-aminotransferase (GOGAT) represent the two main pathways of ammonium assimilation in Corynebacterium glutamicum. In this study, the ammonium assimilating fluxes in vivo in the wild-type ATCC 13032 strain and its GDH mutant were quantitated in continuous cultures. To do this, the incorporation of 15N label from [15N]ammonium in glutamate and glutamine was monitored with a time resolution of about 10 min with in vivo 15N nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) used in combination with a recently developed high-cell-density membrane-cyclone NMR bioreactor system. The data were used to tune a standard differential equation model of ammonium assimilation that comprised ammonia transmembrane diffusion, GDH, GS, GOGAT, and glutamine amidotransferases, as well as the anabolic incorporation of glutamate and glutamine into biomass. The results provided a detailed picture of the fluxes involved in ammonium assimilation in the two different C. glutamicum strains in vivo. In both strains, transmembrane equilibration of 100 mM [15N]ammonium took less than 2 min. In the wild type, an unexpectedly high fraction of 28% of the NH4+ was assimilated via the GS reaction in glutamine, while 72% were assimilated by the reversible GDH reaction via glutamate. GOGAT was inactive. The analysis identified glutamine as an important nitrogen donor in amidotransferase reactions. The experimentally determined amount of 28% of nitrogen assimilated via glutamine is close to a theoretical 21% calculated from the high peptidoglycan content of C. glutamicum. In the GDH mutant, glutamate was exclusively synthesized over the GS/GOGAT pathway. Its level was threefold reduced compared to the wild type.  相似文献   

11.
Despite striking advances in functional brain imaging, the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie the signals detected by these techniques are still largely unknown. The basic physiological principle of functional imaging is represented by the tight coupling existing between neuronal activity and the associated local increase in both blood flow and energy metabolism. Positron emission tomography (PET) signals detect blood flow, oxygen consumption and glucose use associated with neuronal activity; the degree of blood oxygenation is currently thought to contribute to the signal detected with functional magnetic resonance imaging, while magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) identifies the spatio-temporal pattern of the activity-dependent appearance of certain metabolic intermediates such as glucose or lactate. Recent studies, including those of neurotransmitter-regulated metabolic fluxes in purified preparations and analyses of the cellular localization of enzymes and transporters involved in energy metabolism, as well as in vivo microdialysis and MRS approaches have identified the neurotransmitter glutamate and astrocytes, a specific type of glial cell, as pivotal elements in the coupling of synaptic activity with energy metabolism. Astrocytes are ideally positioned to sense increases in synaptic activity and to couple them with energy metabolism. Indeed they possess specialized processes that cover the surface of intraparenchymal capillaries, suggesting that astrocytes may be a likely site of prevalent glucose uptake. Other astrocyte processes are wrapped around synaptic contacts which possess receptors and reuptake sites for neurotransmitters. Glutamate stimulates glucose uptake into astrocytes. This effect is mediated by specific glutamate transporters present on these cells. The activity of these transporters, which is tightly coupled to the synaptic release of glutamate and operates the clearance of glutamate from the extracellular space, is driven by the electrochemical gradient of Na+. This Na(+)-dependent uptake of glutamate into astrocytes triggers a cascade of molecular events involving the Na+/K(+)-ATPase leading to the glycolytic processing of glucose and the release of lactate by astrocytes. The stoichiometry of this process is such that for one glutamate molecule taken up with three Na+ ions, one glucose molecule enters an astrocyte, two ATP molecules are produced through aerobic glycolysis and two lactate molecules are released. Within the astrocyte, one ATP molecule fuels one 'turn of the pump' while the other provides the energy needed to convert glutamate to glutamine by glutamine synthase. Evidence has been accumulated from structural as well as functional studies indicating that, under aerobic conditions, lactate may be the preferred energy substrate of activated neurons. Indeed, in the presence of oxygen, lactate is converted to pyruvate, which can be processed through the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the associated oxidative phosphorylation, to yield 17 ATP molecules per lactate molecule. These data suggest that during activation the brain may transiently resort to aerobic glycolysis occurring in astrocytes, followed by the oxidation of lactate by neurons. The proposed model provides a direct mechanism to couple synaptic activity with glucose use and is consistent with the notion that the signals detected during physiological activation with 18F-deoxyglucose (DG)-PET may reflect predominantly uptake of the tracer into astrocytes. This conclusion does not question the validity of the 2-DG-based techniques, rather it provides a cellular and molecular basis for these functional brain imaging techniques.  相似文献   

12.
Activities of monoamine oxidase (MAO) A and B were measured during the first month of postnatal development in mouse cerebellum and in primary cultures of either cerebellar granule cells or cerebellar astrocytes, derived from 7-day-old cerebella. In addition, effects of the two monoamines, serotonin (a MAO A substrate) and phenylethylamine (a MAO B substrate) on the release of glutamate under resting conditions and in a transmitter related fashion (i.e., potassium-induced, calcium-dependent glutamate release) were studied during the same period. Both MAO A and MAO B activities increased during in vivo development (beginning around postnatal day 14) and in cultured astrocytes (during a comparable time period and to a similar extent), but remained constant at a low level in granule cells. In 4-day-old cerebellar granule cell cultures there was no potassium-induced glutamate release but serotonin as well as phenylethylamine reduced the release in both the presence and absence of excess potassium. In 8- and 12-day-old granule cell cultures and in 8- and 18-day old astrocyte cultures there was a pronounced glutamate release during superfusion with 50 mM K+. In both neurons and astrocytes this response was inhibited by 1 nM of either serotonin or phenylethylamine. In the astrocytes the inhibition was followed by an increased release of glutamate in both the presence and absence of the high potassium concentration, whereas the 8-day-old neurons showed only a slight increase in glutamate release after the with-drawal of the monoamine and only in the absence of excess potassium. The response was almost identical in 8-and 18-day-old astrocytes in spite of the marked difference in MAO activities.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Paola S. Timiras.  相似文献   

13.
Cerebral hyperammonemia is a hallmark of hepatic encephalopathy, a debilitating condition arising secondary to liver disease. Pyruvate oxidation including tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolism has been suggested to be inhibited by hyperammonemia at the pyruvate and -ketoglutarate dehydrogenase steps. Catabolism of the branched-chain amino acid isoleucine provides both acetyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA, thus by-passing both the pyruvate dehydrogenase and the -ketoglutarate dehydrogenase steps. Potentially, this will enable the TCA cycle to work in the face of ammonium-induced inhibition. In addition, this will provide the -ketoglutarate carbon skeleton for glutamate and glutamine synthesis by glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase (astrocytes only), respectively, both reactions fixing ammonium. Cultured cerebellar neurons (primarily glutamatergic) or astrocytes were incubated in the presence of either [U-13C]glucose (2.5 mM) and isoleucine (1 mM) or [U-13C]isoleucine and glucose. Cell cultures were treated with an acute ammonium chloride load of 2 (astrocytes) or 5 mM (neurons and astrocytes) and incorporation of 13C-label into glutamate, aspartate, glutamine and alanine was determined employing mass spectrometry. Labeling from [U-13C]glucose in glutamate and aspartate increased as a result of ammonium-treatment in both neurons and astrocytes, suggesting that the TCA cycle was not inhibited. Labeling in alanine increased in neurons but not in astrocytes, indicating elevated glycolysis in neurons. For both neurons and astrocytes, labeling from [U-13C]isoleucine entered glutamate and aspartate albeit to a lower extent than from [U-13C]glucose. Labeling in glutamate and aspartate from [U-13C]isoleucine was decreased by ammonium treatment in neurons but not in astrocytes, the former probably reflecting increased metabolism of unlabeled glucose. In astrocytes, ammonia treatment resulted in glutamine production and release to the medium, partially supported by catabolism of [U-13C]isoleucine. In conclusion, i) neuronal and astrocytic TCA cycle metabolism was not inhibited by ammonium and ii) isoleucine may provide the carbon skeleton for synthesis of glutamate/glutamine in the detoxification of ammonium.  相似文献   

14.
It appears almost incredible that the first indications that glutamate excites brain tissue were obtained during the second half of the 20th century, that vesicles containing glutamate were demonstrated in glutamatergic neurons less than 25 years ago, and that glutamate was not accepted as the major excitatory transmitter until about the same time. During this span of time it has also become realized that glutamate is so much more than a conventional neurotransmitter: (1) astrocytes express vesicles accumulating glutamate by vesicular transporters akin to the vesicular glutamate transporters in glutamatergic neurons, and they release glutamate by exocytosis; (2) a series of metabolic processes in astrocytes (glutamate uptake, glutamine synthetase activity, glutamine release) are involved in neuronal reutilization of transmitter glutamate; (3) glutamine may also be utilized for synthesis of GABA, the major inhibitory transmitter; (4) de novo synthesis of glutamate accounts for 20% of cerebral glucose metabolism, all of which initially occurs in astrocytes, and at steady state a corresponding amount of glutamate is oxidatively degraded, mainly or exclusively in astrocytes; (5) tissue contents of glutamate/glutamine increase during enhanced glutamatergic activity, i.e., astrocytic de novo synthesis exceeds astrocytic metabolic degradation of glutamate.  相似文献   

15.
A flux analysis model for the metabolism of neurotransmitter glutamate is constructed, in order to study functional aspects of its metabolism. This work is based on the potassium [K(+)] evoked neurotransmitter glutamate released, as measured in a series of experiments of superfused rat or mouse brain preparations. These measurements are combined with data reported, concerning the metabolism of glutamate and its precursors, glutamine and glucose in rat cerebral cells in vivo. The proposed stoichiometry of the specific reaction network renders the model solvable. The classification procedure establishes that the measured fluxes are all balanceable and all non-measured fluxes can be calculated. The system is well posed with a condition number of 7.8536. The results emphasize the importance of phosphate activated glutaminase and aspartate aminotransferase in the metabolism of neurotransmitter glutamate. Reported data on the rate of the malate-aspartate shuttle, as well as the anaplerotic flux of the glial pyruvate carboxylase reaction are in agreement with the estimations calculated from the proposed model.  相似文献   

16.
It is well established that ammonia is detoxified in the brain to form glutamine and that astrocytes play a major role in this process. The synthesis of glutamine requires glutamate and ATP. Since glutamate and ATP are also required for the synthesis of glutathione (GSH), we examined the effect of pathophysiological concentrations of ammonia on levels of GSH in primary cultures of astrocytes. GSH content in the medium increased in a dose- and time-dependent manner in the presence of ammonia. After an initial decrease, cellular GSH content increased in a similar manner. The levels of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) were also increased. A linear relationship was observed between ammonia concentration and the increase in GSH levels. An increase in the efflux of GSH from cells into medium was also observed under these conditions. Buthionine sulfoximine and acivicin, but not methionine sulfoximine, blocked the ammonia induced increase in GSH levels. No, or minor, changes in the activities of enzymes (gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, GSH reductase and GSH-peroxidase) that might influence GSH levels were identified and thus could not account for the ammonia induced increase in GSH levels in astrocytes. These findings indicate that pathophysiological concentrations of ammonium ions result in increased astroglial levels of GSH which may affect the metabolism and function of astrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Present status and significance of the glutamine cycle in neural tissues   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Evidence derived from various types of neurochemical experiments indicates that in the CNS of vertebrates there is a net flux of glutamate and GABA from neurons to astroglia and a metabolic conversion of these amino acids to glutamine. This glutamine is apparently released into the interstitial fluid and is in part taken up neurons and converted back into glutamate and GABA. This process, which is frequently referred to as “the glutamine cycle”, probably reflects the involvement of astrocytes in maintaining very low extracellular levels of glutamate and GABA, and the role of glutamine as a metabolic precursor of the transmitter pools of glutamate and GABA. The synthesis and release of glutamine by astrocytes may also reflect the role of these cells in ammonia detoxification. The quantitative importance of glutamine as a precursor of the neurotransmitter pools of glutamate and GABA has yet to be established. Other potential metabolic precursors such as α-ketoglutarate have not yet been evaluated adequately.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract: The metabolic fate of glutamate in astrocytes has been controversial since several studies reported >80% of glutamate was metabolized to glutamine; however, other studies have shown that half of the glutamate was metabolized via the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and half converted to glutamine. Studies were initiated to determine the metabolic fate of increasing concentrations of [U-13C]glutamate in primary cultures of cerebral cortical astrocytes from rat brain. When astrocytes from rat brain were incubated with 0.1 m M [U-13C]glutamate 85% of the 13C metabolized was converted to glutamine. The formation of [1,2,3-13C3]glutamate demonstrated metabolism of the labeled glutamate via the TCA cycle. When astrocytes were incubated with 0.2–0.5 m M glutamate, 13C from glutamate was also incorporated into intracellular aspartate and into lactate that was released into the media. The amount of [13C]lactate was essentially unchanged within the range of 0.2–0.5 m M glutamate, whereas the amount of [13C]aspartate continued to increase in parallel with the increase in glutamate concentration. The amount of glutamate metabolized via the TCA cycle progressively increased from 15.3 to 42.7% as the extracellular glutamate concentration increased from 0.1 to 0.5 m M , suggesting that the concentration of glutamate is a major factor determining the metabolic fate of glutamate in astrocytes. Previous studies using glutamate concentrations from 0.01 to 0.5 m M and astrocytes from both rat and mouse brain are consistent with these findings.  相似文献   

19.
1. Glutaminase and glutamine synthetase are simultaneously active in the intact liver, resulting in an energy consuming cycling of glutamine at a rate up to 0.2 mumol per g per min. 2. An increase in portal glutamine concentration was followed by an increased flux through glutaminase, but flux through glutamine synthetase remained unchanged. Glutaminase flux was also increased by ammonium ions or glucagon; these effects were additive. 3. Glutamine synthetase flux was increased by ammonium ions, but this activation was partly overcome by increasing portal glutamine concentrations. Glutamine synthetase flux was slightly increased by glucagon at portal glutamine concentrations of about 0.2-0.3 mM, but was strongly inhibited above 0.6 mMs. 4. During experimental metabolic acidosis there was an increased net release of glutamine by the liver, being due to opposing changes of flux through glutaminase and glutamine synthetase. Conversely, an increased glutamine uptake by the liver during metabolic alkalosis was observed due to an inhibition of glutamine synthetase and an activation of glutaminase. However, the two enzyme activities respond differently depending on whether glucagon or ammonium ions are present.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamine synthetase (GS) activity in cultured rat astrocytes was measured in extracts and compared to the intracellular rate of glutamine synthesis by intact control astrocytes or astrocytes exposed to 1 mM 8-bromo-cAMP (8Br-cAMP)+1 M dexamethasone (DEX) for 4 days. GS activity in extracts of astrocytes treated with 8Br-cAMP+DEX was 7.5 times greater than the activity in extracts of control astrocytes. In contrast, the intracellular rate of glutamine synthesis by intact cells increased only 2-fold, suggesting that additional intracellular effectors regulate the expression of GS activity inside the intact cell. The rate of glutamine synthesis by astrocytes was 4.3 times greater in MEM than in HEPES buffered Hank's salts. Synthesis of glutamine by intact astrocytes cultured in MEM was independent of the external glutamine or ammonia concentrations but was increased by higher extracellular glutamate concentrations. In studies with intact astrocytes 80% of the original [U-14C]glutamate was recovered in the medium as radioactive glutamine, 2–3% as aspartate, and 7% as glutamate after 2 hours for both control and treated astrocytes. The results suggest: (1) astrocytes are highly efficient in the conversion of glutamate to glutamine; (2) induction of GS activity increases the rate of glutamate conversion to glutamine by astrocytes and the rate of glutamine release into the medium; (3) endogenous intracellular regulators of GS activity control the flux of glutamate through this enzymatic reaction; and, (4) the composition of the medium alters the rate of glutamine synthesis from external glutamate.  相似文献   

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