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1.
Groups of rats were deprived of food overnight and then given free access to diets designed to raise (carbohydrate) or lower (carbohydrate and large neutral amino acids) brain tryptophan concentrations. Similar diets were supplemented with 40% fat and fed to other groups. All animals were killed 2h after food presentation. Sera from animals fed carbohydrate plus fat contained 2.5 times as much free tryptophan concentrations did not differ. Similarly, sera from rats fed on carbohydrate, large neutral amino acids, and 40% fat contained 5 times as much free tryptophan as those from rats given this meal without fat, but brain tryptophan concentrations increased by only 26%. Correlations were made between brain tryptophan and (1) free serum tryptophan, (2) the ratio of free serum tryptophan to the sum of the other large neutral amino acids in serum that compete with it for uptake into the brain, (3) total serum tryptophan or (4) the ratio of total serum tryptophan to the sum of its circulating competitors. The r values for correlations (3) and (4) (i.e. those involving total serum tryptophan) were appreciably higher than those for correlations (1) and (2). Brain tyrosine concentrations also were found to correlate well with the ratio of serum tyrosine to the sum of its competitors. Competition for uptake into the brain among large neutral amino acids (represented here by serum ratios) thus appears to determine the changes in the brain concentrations of these amino acids under physiological conditions(i.e. after food consumption). Total, not free, serum tryptophan is the relevant index for predicting brain tryptophan concentrations.  相似文献   

2.
The injection of caffeine (100 mg/kg, i.p.) into male rats acutely increased brain levels of trytophan, serotonin (5-HT) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA). Blood levels of glucose, nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) and insulin also increased, while those of the aromatic and branched-chain amino acids fell. Serum tryptophan levels either did not fall, or increased. Consequently, the serum ratio of trypthopahn to the sum of other large neutral amino acids (LNAA) increased. Less consistently noted were increases in serum free tryptophan levels. Brain tyrosine levels were not appreciably altered by caffeine, nor was the serum tyrosine ratio. In dose-response studies, 25 mg/kg of caffeine was the minimal effective dose needed to raise brain tryptophan, but only the 100 mg/kg dose elevated all three indoles in brain. In no experiments did caffeine, at any time or dose, alter brain levels of dopamine or norepinephrine. Caffeine thus probably raises brain tryptophan levels by causing insulin secretion, and thereby changing plasma amino acid levels to favor increased tryptophan uptake into brain. The rises in brain 5-HT and 5-HIAA may follow from the increase in brain tryptophan, although further data are required clearly to establish such a mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
Liver dysfunction was produced in rats by surgical portocaval anastomosis (PCA), and the time-course of changes in brain tryptophan and 5-HT metabolism studied in relation to plasma changes possibly influencing brain tryptophan concentration. Brain tryptophan and 5-hydroxyindolylacetic acid (5-HIAA) levels were increased greatly and maximally on the day after PCA and remained high. 5-HT changes were less marked but had a similar time-course. Plasma total tryptophan was little changed but plasma free tryptophan was raised. The latter change showed a similar time-course to that of brain tryptophan but was not large enough to account completely for it. Sham operation was followed by significant but transient increases in plasma free tryptophan, brain tryptophan and 5-HIAA but these were much smaller than after PCA. Brain tryptophan did not correlate with plasma total tryptophan either in control or PCA rats but it correlated significantly with plasma free tryptophan in both groups. However brain levels were much higher in PCA rats than in controls with similar plasma free tryptophan levels at all times from the first day after operation. The increase of brain tryptophan in anastomosed rats not accounted for by plasma free tryptophan was explained neither by insulin changes nor by an increase of the insulin/glucagon ratio nor by changes in plasma concentrations of those amino acids which compete with tryptophan for entry into brain. The results therefore indicate an unknown influence on brain tryptophan concentration in PCA rats. As tyrosine changes in brain and plasma after PCA were very similar to those of tryptophan this influence may not be specific to tryptophan. Results suggest that under the conditions used brain tryptophan concentrations of both PCA and control rats are more influenced by changes of plasma free tryptophan concentration than by changes of plasma concentrations of competing amino acids.  相似文献   

4.
During acute hepatic coma following two-stage hepatic devascularization in the rat, profound changes occurred in plasma and whole-brain amino acids and putative neurotransmitters. Brain ammonia, glutamine and GABA were increased, aspartate was decreased, while glutamate was unchanged. An increase in brain tryptophan was accompanied by a similar increase in plasma unbound tryptophan but decreased plasma total tryptophan. These changes occurred in the presence of high plasma levels of the other neutral amino acids, including the branched chain amino acids. Plasma insulin was unchanged while glucagon levels rose, resulting in a decreased insulin to glucagon ratio. These results suggest that while plasma unbound tryptophan may influence brain tryptophan levels, altered plasma concentrations of neutral amino acids which compete with tryptophan for transport into the brain do not contribute to the increase in brain tryptophan observed during acute hepatic coma.  相似文献   

5.
Variables Influencing the Effect of a Meal on Brain Tryptophan   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2  
Previous work from our laboratory points to plasma free tryptophan being a useful predictor of brain tryptophan concentration in many circumstances. Other work, in particular various studies on the acute effects of food intake, has emphasized the roles of plasma total tryptophan and of plasma large neutral amino acids that compete with tryptophan for transport to the brain. We have now studied associations between the above variables under different dietary conditions. Rats were allowed to feed for restricted periods during a 12-h light-12-h dark cycle. In the first study, rats were given access to a carbohydrate diet for 2 h midway through the light cycle and following an 18-h fast. The resultant rise of brain tryptophan was explicable largely by the associated fall in large neutral amino acids. In a second study, rats were adapted to a regimen whereby they were allowed access to the standard laboratory diet for 4 h during the dark cycle for 3 weeks. A postprandial decrease in brain tryptophan was associated with a fall in free tryptophan and of its ratio to competing amino acids. The brain change could be attributed neither to changes in plasma total tryptophan (which increased) nor to changes of its ratio to the competers (which remained unchanged). Results as a whole are thus consistent with changes of plasma free tryptophan and large neutral amino acid concentrations affecting brain tryptophan concentration under different dietary circumstances. It is suggested that these influences serve to maintain brain tryptophan when dietary supplies are defective.  相似文献   

6.
Previous work by other authors has shown hat insulin administration increases brain tryptophan levels and serotonin (5–HT) metabolism. The present study partially replicates these results and tests whether these effects could be due to insulin-induced hypoglycemic stress, since stressers such as immobilization or food deprivation also increase brain tryptophan and 5-HT metabolism. Ingestion of a dextrose solution by rats administered insulin (2 I.U./kg) prevents the extreme fall in blood glucose concentration and rise in plasma corticosterone following insulin injections alone. This treatment, however, produces a larger increase in brain tryptophan (30%) than insulin-injected rats allowed only tap water. The greater accumulation of brain tryptophan may reflect an additive effect of the endogenously released insulin to that exogenously administered, since ingestion of the dextrose solution could trigger insulin secretion. In addition, brain tryptophan and 5-HT metabolism were measured in streptozotocin-diabetic rats maintained on several different feeding schedules to control for the effects of hyperphagia. All groups of diabetics showed significant decreases of approx 30% in brain tryptophan concentrations, while 5-HT metabolism was unchanged. This deficit in brain tryptophan is reversed within 2 h after insulin administration (2 I.U./kg). These results indicate that changes in brain tryptophan and 5-HT metabolism following insulin injections are not due to hypoglycemic stress, and that brain tryptophan is low in diabetics but increases above normal after administration of insulin. The results are discussed with respect to the effects of insulin on plasma levels of the neutral amino acids and a possible direct effect of insulin on the uptake of tryptophan by brain.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: The relations of plasma concentrations of substances claimed to influence brain tryptophan concentration (total tryptophan, free tryptophan, large neutral amino acids) with the concentrations of tryptophan, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in the forebrain were investigated in rats of different ages (from 8 days to 16 months after birth). In brain, tryptophan fell by 46%, whereas 5-HT rose by 20% between 8 and 40/42 days after birth. Thereafter, the levels of both tryptophan and 5-HT remained essentially constant. Brain 5-HIAA showed a more complex pattern, rising by 63% between 8 and 19 days, falling between 19 and 40/42 days, and then gradually rising until values at 16 months were significantly higher than those at 40/42 days. In plasma, the concentrations of free fatty acids, free and total tryptophan, and large neutral amino acids all decreased between 8 and 19 days and thereafter either remained constant or increased slowly, the exception being total tryptophan values, which showed large increases between 28/30 and 60/70 days. Also, the unidirectional uptake of tryptophan from blood to brain was determined using a carotid artery injection technique. Uptake values obtained using a tracer concentration of tryptophan in the injection solution decreased progressively with age. Kinetic analysis of the data in terms of the Michaelis-Menten equation for carrier-mediated transport indicated significantly lower values for Vmax and KD (a component for nonsaturable transport) in 6-month-old rats as compared to 19-day-old suckling rats, whereas Km values were the same at both ages. Detailed analysis of these results indicated that the age-related changes in brain tryptophan were largely explicable in terms of plasma free tryptophan in association with blood-brain transport characteristics; moderate differences in concentration of amino acids competing for transport were without apparent effect between 19 days and 16 months. The larger differences between 8 and 19 days after birth could be important.  相似文献   

8.
The concentration of tryptophan in serum, and the levels of tryptophan, serotonin (5-HT), and 5-hydroxyindole-acetic acid (5-HIAA) in brain are substantially reduced in rats that consume for 6 weeks a diet in which corn is the only source of protein. Single injections of L-tryptophan (25, 50, or 100 mg/kg) cause dose-related increases in brain tryptophan, 5-HT, and 5-HIAA in corn-fed animals. At each dose, brain tryptophan content rises to a proportionately greater extent in corn-fed rats than in well-nourished controls, even though serum tryptophan concentrations attain higher levels in controls. This difference may reflect the greatly reduced serum concentrations in corn-fed rats of other large neutral amino acids that compete with tryptophan for uptake into the brain (tyrosine, phenylalanine, leucine, isoleucine, and valine). However, the substantial decrease in serum albumin levels also diminishes the binding of tryptophan to serum albumin; thus it is not yet possible to state which of these changes is responsible for the much greater increments in brain tryptophan observed in corn-fed rats after tryptophan injection. The fact that tryptophan administration rapidly restores brain 5-hydroxyindole levels in corn-fed animals suggests that the reductions in 5-HT and 5-HIAA levels associated with this type of malnutrition may be largely caused by inadequate availability of substrate.  相似文献   

9.
Psychiatric patients undergoing the psychosurgical operation of stereotactic subcaudate tractotomy were infused intravenously with either saline or L-tryptophan (15 mg/kg/h). Plasma, lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), ventricular CSF and a specimen of frontal cortex were collected. The relationships of plasma concentrations of substances claimed to influence brain tryptophan concentration (total tryptophan, free tryptophan, large neutral amino acids) with the concentration of tryptophan in the cortex and CSF were investigated. Tryptophan infusion resulted in plasma tryptophan values comparable to those found after oral doses used in treating depression or insomnia, and about sixfold increases of tryptophan in the cerebral cortex. Increased brain 5-hydroxytryptamine synthesis was indicated by significant rises of CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. The concentration of plasma free tryptophan was a better predictor than plasma total tryptophan of cortex tryptophan concentration. As all correlation coefficients of plasma versus brain or plasma versus ventricular CSF tryptophan concentrations were decreased when allowance was made for differences of concentration of large neutral amino acids, the results suggest that the role of these substances within their physiological range as inhibitors of tryptophan transport to the brain may previously have been overemphasised.  相似文献   

10.
Uptake of 10 microM L-tryptophan into isolated rat brain synaptosomes was studied to assess its effect on the rate of serotonin synthesis from tryptophan. The initial rate of uptake was rapid, being two orders of magnitude above the rate of tryptophan hydroxylation. Uptake was highly concentrative, the concentration ratio across the plasma membrane at equilibrium being approximately 9. This concentration ratio was decreased to about 1 in the presence of high concentrations of amino acids transported by the L-type neutral amino acid uptake system. A mixture of the large neutral amino acids at physiological concentrations decreased the internal tryptophan concentration to 58% of that in their absence. Large tryptophan concentration ratios were observed in experiments in which Na+ in the medium was replaced with choline+. The concentrative uptake of tryptophan was energy-dependent, being decreased by inclusion of cyanide and omission of glucose. The concentration gradient was abolished by veratridine or rotenone. Time courses of the changes in ATP content and tryptophan concentration ratio on addition of these and other agents established that tryptophan uptake is probably not driven by ATP hydrolysis or efflux of other amino acids, but by the plasma membrane potential.  相似文献   

11.
We compared the acute effects of intragastric administration of protein and carbohydrate on tryptophan and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT) in rat brain, pineal, intestine, and pancreas. Protein decreased and carbohydrate increased brain indoles relative to water-infused controls. These effects were due to competition between the large neutral amino acids for entry into the brain. This competition does not exist in the pineal. The macronutrients had no effect on pineal tryptophan metabolism. In the intestine, protein resulted in higher tryptophan levels as compared to controls, owing to absorption of tryptophan in the protein. However intestinal 5HT levels were influenced by factors other than precursor availability. Pancreatic indoles were affected in a similar manner to the brain indoles. Competition between the large neutral amino acids for entry into the pancreas was also indicated by the finding that valine administration lowered brain and pancreatic tryptophan, but not the levels in the intestine and pineal. It remains to be seen whether the decrease in pancreatic 5HT after a protein meal and the increase after carbohydrate modulate the release of insulin and glucagon.  相似文献   

12.
In suckling hyperphenylalaninemic (hyper-Phe) rats, all essential amino acids including tryptophan are depleted in the blood. The inadequate supply of Trp to the developing brain leads to a decline of Trp, of serotonin, and of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. The exhaustion of amino acids in both blood and brain can be restored by administration of Lys. Even though Phe is still elevated in blood and brain, Trp, serotonin and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, are no longer depleted in the brain. This observation contradicts the idea that the serotonin deficit in the developing hyper-Phe brain is caused by competitive uptake inhibition of tryptophan or by the interference of Phe metabolites with the formation of serotonin. Increased accumulation of all large neutral amino acids in peripheral tissues and an impeded intestinal amino acid transport in suckling hyper-Phe rats appear to be responsible for the deficient supply of other amino acids, including Trp, to the developing brain. The availability of Lys for developing extraintestinal tissues seems to be involved in the regulation of intestinal amino acid transport.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of diabetes (streptozotocin, 65 mg/kg ip), dietary protein intake (15-60%), and plasma amino acid concentrations on brain large neutral amino acid levels in rats was examined. After 20 days, the plasma concentrations of methionine and the branched chain amino acids (BCAA), valine, isoleucine, and leucine were increased in diabetic rats. In brain tissue, methionine and valine levels were increased but threonine, tyrosine, and tryptophan concentrations were depressed. Increased protein consumption promoted a diabetic-like plasma amino acid pattern in normal rats while enhancing that of diabetic animals. However, with the exception of threonine, glycine, valine, and tyrosine, there was little effect on brain amino acid levels. A good association was found between the calculated brain influx rate and the actual brain concentration of threonine, methionine, tyrosine, and tryptophan in diabetic animals. There was no correlation, however, between brain influx rate and brain BCAA levels. Thus, the brain amino acid pattern in diabetes represents the combined effects of insulin insufficiency and composition of the diet ingested on plasma amino acid levels as well as metabolic adaptation within the brain itself.  相似文献   

14.
When plasma tryptophan is elevated by the injection of tryptophan or insulin, or by the consumption of carbohydrates, brain tryptophan and serotonin also rise; however, when even larger elevations of plasma tryptophan are produced by the ingestion of protein-containing diets, brain tryptophan and serotonin do not change. The main determinant of brain tryptophan and serotonin concentrations does not appear to be plasma tryptophan alone, but the ratio of this amino acid to other plasma neutral amino acids (that is, tyrosine, phenylalanine, leucine, isoleucine, and valine) that compete with it for uptake into the brain.  相似文献   

15.
Threonine content of brain decreases in young rats fed a threonine-limiting, low protein diet containing a supplement of small neutral amino acids (serine, glycine and alanine), which are competitors of threonine transport in other systems (Tews et al., 1977). Threonine transport by brain slices was inhibited more by a complex amino acid mixture resembling plasma from rats fed the small neutral amino acid supplement than by mixtures resembling plasma from control rats or from rats fed a supplement of large neutral amino acids. Greater inhibition was seen with mixtures containing only the small neutral amino acids than with mixtures containing only large neutral amino acids. On an equimolar basis, serine and alanine were the most inhibitory; large neutrals were moderately so; and glycine and lysine were without effect. Threonine transport was also strongly inhibited by α-amino-n-butyric acid and homoserine, less so by α-aminoisobutyric acid, and not at all by GABA. The complex amino acid mixtures strongly inhibited α-aminoisobutyric acid transport by brain or liver slices but, in contrast to effects in brain, the extent of the inhibition in liver was not much affected by altering the composition of the mixture. Tryptophan accumulation by brain slices was effectively inhibited by other large neutral amino acids in physiologically occurring concentrations. Threonine, or a mixture of serine, glycine and alanine only slightly inhibited tryptophan uptake; basic amino acids were without effect and histidine stimulated tryptophan transport slightly. These results support the conclusion that a diet-induced decrease in the concentration in brain of a specific amino acid may be related to increased inhibition of its transport into brain by increases in the concentrations of transport-related, plasma amino acids.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: Rats with portacaval shunts were used as a model of hepatic encephalopathy and compared to sham-operated controls. First, the changes in intermediary metabolites and amino acids in blood and whole brain were characterized and found to be similar at 4 and 7 weeks after shunting. Second, the effects of nutritional therapy on selected metabolites and tryptophan transport into brain were assessed in rats 5 weeks after surgery. Ordinary food was removed and the rats were treated with glucose given either by mouth or intravenously, or intravenous glucose plus branched chain amino acids. Several abnormalities in plasma amino acid concentrations were reversed by treatment. The abnormally high brain uptake index of tryptophan, a consequence of portacaval shunting, was not lowered by any of the treatment regimens; it was even higher in the groups given glucose by mouth and glucose plus amino acids. Calculated competition for entry of tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine into brain was unchanged (glucose plus amino aicds), or reduced (glucose alone). Brain glutamine content was brought to near normal by all treatments. Infusion of glucose plus branched chain amino acids normalized brain content of tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine, even though the brain uptake index of tryptophan was higher in this group. Thus, partial or complete reversal of several abnormalities found after portacaval shunting was achieved by removal of oral food and administration of glucose. The addition of branched chain amino acids to the glucose infusion restored brain content of three aromatic amino acids to near normal, by a mechanism which appeared to be unrelated to transport across the blood-brain barrier.  相似文献   

17.
Immobilization for 2 h significantly decreased plasma concentrations of 13 of 16 amino acids assayed, including the transmitter amine precursors tyrosine and total tryptophan. The level of plasma free tryptophan, however, was increased. Despite the reduced plasma levels, corresponding brain concentrations of many large neutral amino acids (LNAAs) were increased (tryptophan, phenylalanine, valine, leucine, and isoleucine). Brain concentrations of tyrosine and the other amino acids measured were unaltered. The results for the LNAAs were not explained by calculated brain influx rates. Therefore, altered influx kinetics or perhaps altered brain protein metabolism or efflux may be responsible. Comparison of calculated brain influxes and brain concentrations of LNAAs suggests that the rise in level of plasma free tryptophan during immobilization is not responsible for the increase in level of brain tryptophan and that the mechanism responsible for the maintenance of or increase in brain concentrations of the other LNAAs is probably involved. Maintenance of brain concentrations of basic amino acids is explicable by reduced competition for brain uptake.  相似文献   

18.
1. Novel methods, using L-[ring-2-14C]tryptophan, are described for the measurement of tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase activity and tryptophan accumulation in isolated rat liver cells. 2. The effects of bovine serum albumin, non-esterified fatty acids and neutral amino acids on tryptophan oxidation by hepatocytes and on the partition of tryptophan between free and albumin-bound forms were investigated. 3. Oxidation of physiological concentrations (0.1 mM) of tryptophan was inhibited by approx. 50% in the presence of 2% (w/v) bovine serum albumin; no effects were found at tryptophan concentrations of 0.5 mM and above. 4. Increases in free tryptophan concentrations produced by displacement of 0.1 mM-tryptophan from albumin-binding sites by palmitate resulted in increased flux through tryptophan dioxygenase. 5. Addition of a mixture of neutral amino acids, at plasma concentrations, to hepatocyte incubations had no effect on the rate of tryptophan oxidation. 6. It is concluded that alterations in free tryptophan concentrations consequent to changes in albumin binding may be an important factor in regulating tryptophan uptake and catabolism by the liver. The results are briefly discussed with reference to possible consequences on brain tryptophan metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
A non-linear relationship between the plasma non-esterified fatty acid concentration and the percentage of free plasma tryptophan was found in rats in different nutritional states, although non-esterified fatty acids are not the only factors determining the percentage of free tryptophan. This relationship was not seen in rats injured by limb ischaemia. The effect of drugs causing rapid increases in the plasma non-esterified fatty acid concentration was also studied. Isoprenaline decreased the total plasma tryptophan concentration. Dichloroisoprenaline caused a sustained increase in the plasma non-esterified fatty acid concentration which was accompanied by an increase in the concentration of free plasma tryptophan and followed by a fall in the concentration of total tryptophan. The loss of tryptophan from the plasma was attributed to an altered distribution of tryptophan in the extracellular space rather than to increased metabolism. This interpretation was supported by determinations of the irreversible disposal rate of plasma tryptophan which in uninjured rats was unaffected by the concentration of free plasma tryptophan. In the injured rats this rate was unaltered during limb ischaemia but was decreased after removal of the tourniquets; increased competition for tissue entry by other neutral amino acids and the fall in body temperature could be factors in this fall.  相似文献   

20.
Effects of isoproterenol (3 mg kg-1, i.p. for 60 min) and salbutamol (3, 10 mg kg-1, i.p. for 60 min) on large neutral amino acid concentrations in rat plasma and brain were assessed. Phenylalanine, leucine, isoleucine, and valine were measured by gas chromatography with electron-capture detection; tyrosine and tryptophan were measured by HPLC with electrochemical detection. These drugs induced increases in brain tryptophan, tyrosine, phenylalanine, and valine and decreases in plasma tryptophan, tyrosine, leucine, isoleucine, and valine. Effects of salbutamol (3 mg kg-1, i.p. for 60 min) were assessed following chronic administration of phenelzine sulfate and desipramine.HCl (each drug 10 mg kg-1 per day, s.c. via Alzet 2ML4 osmotic minipumps for 28 days). There were no effects of these antidepressants on basal levels of large neutral amino acids in brain and plasma. In both brain and plasma, salbutamol-induced changes in large neutral amino acids were unaffected by these antidepressants. The results indicate that beta-adrenoceptor-regulated availability of plasma and brain large neutral amino acids is unaffected by chronic administration of tricyclic or monoamine oxidase inhibitor antidepressants.  相似文献   

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