首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Mildronate (3-(2,2,2,-trimethylhydrazinium)propionate), is a butyrobetaine analogue that is known to inhibit gamma-butyrobetaine hydroxylase, the enzyme catalyzing the last step of carnitine biosynthesis. When administered to adult rats it determines a systemic carnitine deficiency and may therefore serve as an animal model for human carnitine depletion. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of mildronate administration to pregnant and lactating rats on tissue carnitine concentrations in 4- and 13-day-old rat pups. At 14 days of gestation female rats began to receive mildronate in the diet (200 mg/kg/d) and this continued for entire lactation period. Mildronate treatment determined a large reduction of carnitine levels in the milk of lactating dams. Because organ carnitine concentrations in neonatal rats are directly related to dietary supply, pups from mildronate group had significantly depleted levels of total carnitine in serum, heart, liver, muscle, brain and pancreas relative to controls, at 4 and 13 days of age. Correspondingly, an increase in triglyceride levels was observed in liver, heart and muscle of mildronate pups. This is in agreement with a reduction of basal rate of oxidation of [U-(14)C]-palmitate to (14)CO(2) and (14)C-acid-soluble products observed in liver homogenates from carnitine-deficient pups. All functional and biochemical modifications were compatible with a carnitine deficiency status. In conclusion our results describe a model of carnitine depletion in pups, suitable for the investigation of carnitine deficiency in fetal-neonatal nutrition, without any concomitant mildronate-mediated metabolic alterations.  相似文献   

2.
The goal of the present study was to discern the cellular mechanism(s) that contributes to the age-associated decrease in skeletal muscle aerobic capacity. Skeletal muscle mitochondrial content, a parameter of oxidative capacity, was significantly lower (25 and 20% calculated on the basis of citrate synthase and succinate dehydrogenase activities, respectively) in 24-mo-old Fischer 344 rats compared with 6-mo-old adult rats. Mitochondria isolated from skeletal muscle of both age groups had identical state 3 (ADP-stimulated) and ADP-stimulated maximal respiratory rates and phosphorylation potential (ADP-to-O ratios) with both nonlipid and lipid substrates. In contrast, mitochondria from 24-mo-old rats displayed significantly lower state 4 (ADP-limited) respiratory rates and, consequently, higher respiratory control ratios. Consistent with the tighter coupling, there was a 68% reduction in uncoupling protein-3 (UCP-3) abundance in mitochondria from elderly compared with adult rats. Congruent with the respiratory studies, there was no age-associated decrease in carnitine palmitoyltransferase I and carnitine palmitoyltransferase II activities in isolated skeletal muscle mitochondria. However, there was a small, significant decrease in tissue total carnitine content. It is concluded that the in vivo observed decrease in skeletal muscle aerobic capacity with advanced age is a consequence of the decreased mitochondrial density. On the basis of the dramatic reduction of UCP-3 content associated with decreased state 4 respiration of skeletal muscle mitochondria from elderly rats, we propose that an increased free radical production might contribute to the metabolic compromise in aging.  相似文献   

3.
We examined 1) the effect of L-carnitine supplementation on free fatty acid (FFA) utilization during exercise and 2) exercise-induced alterations in plasma levels and skeletal muscle exchange of carnitine. Seven moderately trained human male subjects serving as their own controls participated in two bicycle exercise sessions (120 min, 50% of VO2max). The second exercise was preceded by 5 days of oral carnitine supplementation (CS; 5 g daily). Despite a doubling of plasma carnitine levels, with CS, there were no effects on exercise-induced changes in arterial levels and turnover of FFA, the relation between leg FFA inflow and FFA uptake, or the leg exchange of other substrates. Heart rate during exercise after CS decreased 7-8%, but O2 uptake was unchanged. Exercise before CS induced a fall from 33.4 +/- 1.6 to 30.8 +/- 1.0 (SE) mumol/l in free plasma carnitine despite a release (2.5 +/- 0.9 mumol/min) from the leg. Simultaneously, acylated plasma carnitine rose from 5.0 +/- 1.0 to 14.2 +/- 1.4 mumol/l, with no evidence of leg release. Consequently, total plasma carnitine increased. We concluded that in healthy subjects CS does not influence muscle substrate utilization either at rest or during prolonged exercise and that free carnitine released from muscle during exercise is presumably acylated in the liver and released to plasma.  相似文献   

4.
The ontogeny of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) was examined in liver and muscle throughout growth and development of the domestic felid. Homogenates from animals in six age categories (newborn, 24-h, 3-, 6- and 9-week-old, and adult) were examined. Hepatic CPT specific activity increased progressively from birth to 6 weeks and then declined slightly into adulthood, with maximal values for animals greater than 24 h of age [171 nmol/(min g wet tissue)] being 70% higher than for newborns [99 nmol/(min g wet tissue)] (P<.05). Specific activity in adults was similar to that in 6- and 9-week-old juveniles. Total hepatic CPT activity [nmol/(min liver)] increased linearly with age, but the activity expressed per kg body weight [nmol/(min kg BW)] declined after 3 weeks. In contrast, skeletal muscle CPT-specific activity remained unchanged from birth to 3 weeks and then increased significantly, with maximal values at 9 weeks being 90% greater than those for young animals (newborn to 3 weeks; P<.05), whereas specific activity in adults was 50% lower than that observed in 9-week-old animals (P<.05). Hepatic and muscle apparent Km's for carnitine averaged 440 microM and did not vary with age. Hepatic carnitine concentrations remained relatively constant during development, but were lower in adult lactating females, whereas skeletal muscle concentrations increased markedly with age. Hepatic concentrations were 20-50% higher than apparent Km's for carnitine in young and growing animals, but concentrations were similar to the apparent Km at 6 weeks and significantly lower than the apparent Km in adults. Carnitine concentrations in skeletal muscle were 37% lower than apparent Km during the neonatal period, but significantly higher in cats >3 weeks of age. We conclude that postnatal increases in CPT activity support increased capacity for fatty acid oxidation in the developing felid and that dietary carnitine may be required to maximize enzyme activity.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of long-term carnitine supplementation on age-related changes in tissue carnitine levels and in lipid metabolism were investigated. The total carnitine levels in heart, skeletal muscle, cerebral cortex, and hippocampus were approximately 20% less in aged rats (22 months old) than in young rats (6 months old). On the contrary, plasma carnitine levels were not affected by aging. Supplementation of acetyl-l-carnitine (ALCAR; 100 mg/kg body weight/day for 3 months) significantly increased tissue carnitine levels in aged rats but had little effect on tissue carnitine levels in young rats. Plasma lipoprotein analyses revealed that triacylglycerol levels in VLDL and cholesterol levels in LDL and in HDL were all significantly higher in aged rats than in young rats. ALCAR treatment decreased all lipoprotein fractions and consequently the levels of triacylglycerol and cholesterol. The reduction in plasma cholesterol contents in ALCAR-treated aged rats was attributable mainly to a decrease of cholesteryl esters rather than to a decrease of free cholesterol. Another remarkable effect of ALCAR was that it decreased the cholesterol content and cholesterol-phospholipid ratio in the brain tissues of aged rats. These results indicate that chronic ALCAR supplementation reverses the age-associated changes in lipid metabolism.  相似文献   

6.
Interorgan cooperativity in carnitine metabolism in the trained state   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
This study was designed to evaluate the effects of chronic exercise training on carnitine acetyl- and palmitoyltransferase activity and the distribution of carnitine forms and concentrations in various organs and tissues of female rats. Sprague-Dawley rats were swim trained 6 days/wk and progressed to 75-min swims twice daily (with 3% of their total body weight attached to the medial portion of the tail) at the end of 5 wk of training. Sedentary (S, n = 12) and trained (T, n = 13) animals were killed by decapitation, and the livers, kidneys, hearts, and several skeletal muscle types were removed and immediately frozen in liquid N2 and/or extracted for enzyme activity assays. Blood was collected and plasma was stored frozen. Samples were assayed for free, acid-soluble, and acid-insoluble carnitine. Free carnitine increased significantly (P less than 0.03) in T hearts. Free carnitine remained unchanged in liver, but short-chain acylcarnitines increased significantly (P less than 0.001). There was a significant (P less than 0.001) reduction in long-chain acylcarnitines in kidney in the trained rats, and plasma short-chain acylcarnitine levels also decreased (P less than 0.001). Several significant changes in carnitine distribution also occurred in the superficial and deep portions of the vastus lateralis and in the mixed gastrocnemius muscles. There was a significant reduction in carnitine acetyltransferase activity with training in both the soleus (P less than 0.02) and superficial gastrocnemius (P less than 0.002) muscles. The deep portion of the gastrocnemius muscle contained significantly higher activity than either the superficial portion or the soleus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of exogenous carnitine with whole body carnitine homeostasis was characterized in the rat. Carnitine was administered in pharmacologic doses (0-33.3 mumols/100 g body weight) by bolus, intravenous injection, and plasma, urine, liver, skeletal muscle and heart content of carnitine and acylcarnitines quantitated over a 48 h period. Pre-injection urinary carnitine excretion was circadian as excretion rates were increased 2-fold during the lights-off cycle as compared with the lights-on cycle. Following carnitine administration, there was an increase in urinary total carnitine excretion which accounted for approx. 60% of the administered carnitine at doses above 8.3 mumols/100 g body weight. Urinary acylcarnitine excretion was increased following carnitine administration in a dose-dependent fashion. During the 24 h following administration of 16.7 mumols [14C]carnitine/100 g body weight, urinary carnitine specific activity averaged only 72 +/- 4% of the injection solution specific activity. This dilution of the [14C]carnitine specific activity suggests that endogenous carnitine contributed to the increased net urinary carnitine excretion following carnitine administration. 5 min after administration of 16.7 mumol carnitine/100 g body weight approx. 80% of the injected carnitine was in the extracellular fluid compartment and 5% in the liver. Plasma, liver and soleus total carnitine contents were increased 6 h after administration of 16.7 mumols carnitine/100 g body weight. 6 h post-administration, 37% of the dose was recovered in the urine, 12% remained in the extracellular compartment, 9% was in the liver and 22% was distributed in the skeletal muscle. In liver and plasma, short chain acylcarnitine content was increased 5 min and 6 h post injection as compared with controls. Plasma, liver, skeletal muscle and heart carnitine contents were not different from control levels 48 h after carnitine administration. The results demonstrate that single, bolus administration of carnitine is effective in increasing urinary acylcarnitine elimination. While liver carnitine content is doubled for at least 6 h following carnitine administration, skeletal muscle and heart carnitine pools are only modestly perturbed following a single intravenous carnitine dose. The dilution of [14C]carnitine specific activity in the urine of treated animals suggests that tissue-blood carnitine or acylcarnitine exchange systems contribute to overall carnitine homeostasis following carnitine administration.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The purpose of the present study was to investigate the relationship between plasma carnitine concentration and body composition variation in relation to muscular and fat masses since there is no experimentally proved correlation between plasma carnitine and body masses. We used bioelectric impedance analysis (BIA), to determine body composition and to have a complete physical fitness evaluation. The post-absorptive plasma free carnitine and acetyl carnitine plasma levels, body composition as Fat-Free Mass (FFM) and Fat Mass (FM) in kg, as well as in percent of body mass, were analysed in 33 healthy subjects. A significant negative correlation was found between plasma acetyl carnitine and FFM in weight (kg) as well as in percent of body mass (respectively p < 0.0001; p < 0.01); a significant positive correlation was found only between FM in percent and plasma acetyl carnitine (p < 0.01). The observed negative correlation between plasma acetyl carnitine and muscular mass variation might reflect an oxidative metabolic muscle improvement in relation to muscular fat free mass increment and might be evidence that muscle metabolism change is in relation to plasma acetyl carnitine concentration.  相似文献   

9.
Although the mouse frequently is used to study metabolism and deficiencies therein, little is known about carnitine biosynthesis in this animal. To this point, only laborious procedures have been described to measure the activity of carnitine biosynthesis enzymes using subcellular fractions as the enzyme source. We developed two simple tandem mass spectrometry-based methods to determine the activity of three carnitine biosynthesis enzymes (6-N-trimethyllysine dioxygenase, 4-trimethylaminobutyraldehyde dehydrogenase, and 4-trimethylaminobutyric acid dioxygenase) in total homogenates that can be prepared from frozen tissue. The new assays were used to characterize these enzymes in mouse liver homogenate. Because carnitine biosynthesis has been studied extensively in the rat, we compared the mouse tissue distribution of carnitine biosynthesis enzyme activities and levels of the biosynthesis metabolites with those in the rat to determine which tissues contribute to carnitine biosynthesis in these species. Surprisingly, large differences in enzyme activities were found between the rat and the mouse, whereas carnitine biosynthesis metabolite levels were very similar in both species, possibly due to the different kinetic properties of the first enzyme of carnitine biosynthesis. Also, muscle carnitine levels were found to vary considerably between these two species, suggesting that there is a metabolic dissimilarity between the mouse and the rat.  相似文献   

10.
Diabetes, starvation and various hormonal treatments are known to alter drastically carnitine concentrations in the body. Before the mechanisms controlling carnitine metabolism could be determined, it was necessary to establish normal carnitine concentrations in both sexes at different ages. Carnitine was assayed in plasma, liver, heart and skeletal muscle of rats from birth to weaning. The plasma carnitine increased rapidly during the first 2 days after birth. Carnitine in both heart and skeletal muscle increased, whereas liver concentrations declined during the first week of life. A carnitine-free diet containing sufficient precursors for carnitine biosynthesis was fed to weanling rats. Groups of ten male and ten female rats were killed each week for 10 consecutive weeks. Carnitine was determined in plasma, liver, heart, skeletal muscle, urine and epididymis in the male. There was no difference in carnitine concentrations between the sexes at weaning. Plasma, heart and muscle concentrations were higher in adult male rats than in adult females. However, liver carnitine and urinary carnitine concentrations were higher in adult female than in adult male rats. The epididymal carnitine concentration increased very rapidly during 50 to 70 days of age and the differences in carnitine concentrations between the sexes also became apparent during this time. Thus both the age and the sex of the human subject or experimental animal must be considered when investigating carnitine metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
In rats, circulating carnitine levels were highly correlated with skeletal muscle and heart carnitine concentrations over the range of 26-69 microM serum carnitine, but not at higher extracellular carnitine concentrations (70-188 microM). By contrast, circulating carnitine levels over the entire range studied (26-188 microM) correlated with liver and kidney carnitine concentrations. For each tissue the range of extracellular carnitine concentrations which correlated with the tissue carnitine concentration corresponded with the linear or nearly linear portion of the Michaelis-Menten curve for transport of carnitine in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
In previous studies, sodium pivalate has been administered to rats in their drinking water (20 mmoles/L; equivalent to 0.3% of the diet) as a way to lower the concentration of carnitine in tissues and to produce a model of secondary carnitine deficiency. Although this level of supplementation results in a marked decrease in carnitine concentration in a variety of tissues, it does not produce the classical signs of carnitine deficiency (i.e., decreased fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis). The present study was designed (1) to determine if increasing the level of pivalate supplementation (0.6, 1.0% of the diet) would further reduce the concentrations of total and free carnitine in rat tissues without altering growth or food intake, and (2) to examine the effect of length of feeding (4 vs. 8 weeks) on these variables. Male, Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to either a control (0.2% sodium bicarbonate) or experimental diet (0.3, 0.6, 1.0% sodium pivalate) for either four or eight weeks. Animals (n = 6/group) were housed in metabolic cages; food and water were provided ad libitum throughout the study. Supplementation with sodium pivalate did not alter water intake or urine output. Ingestion of a diet containing 1.0% pivalic acid decreased food intake (g/day; P < 0.05), final body weight (P < 0.007), and growth rate (P < 0.001) after four weeks. The concentration of total carnitine in plasma, heart, liver, muscle, and kidney was reduced in all experimental groups (P < 0.001), regardless of level of supplementation or length of feeding. The concentration of free carnitine in heart, muscle, and kidney was also reduced (P < 0.001) in rats treated with pivalate for either four or eight weeks. The concentration of free carnitine in liver was reduced in animals supplemented with pivalate for eight weeks (P < 0.05), but no effect was observed in livers from rats treated for four weeks. Excretion of total carnitine and short chain acylcarnitine in urine was increased in pivalate supplemented rats throughout the entire feeding period (P < 0.001). Free carnitine excretion was increased during Weeks 1 and 2 (P < 0.01), but began to decline during Week 3 in experimental groups. During Weeks 6 and 8, free carnitine excretion in pivalate supplemented rats was less than that of control animals (P < 0.01). In summary, no further reduction in tissue carnitine concentration was observed when rats were supplemented with sodium pivalate at levels greater than 0.3% of the diet. Food intake (g/day) and growth were decreased in rats fed a diet containing 1.0% sodium pivalate. These data indicate that maximal lowering of tissue carnitine concentrations is achieved by feeding diets containing 0.3% sodium pivalate or less.  相似文献   

13.
1. The behaviour of total acid soluble, short chain esterified and free carnitine in the liver, heart, muscle and brain of chick embryos between 11th and 21st day of development and of 8 and 180-day-old chicks is described. 2. Total acid soluble carnitine fluctuates around the same levels in the brain, liver and muscle until 18th day of development, whereas it attains a peak on that day in the heart. At hatching compared to 18th day, it suddenly increases three times in the muscle, drops not significantly in the heart and brain, but sharply in the liver (-40%). However the levels are always higher than those of the grown chick in the brain but lower in the other tissues. 3. Free carnitine levels are almost constant in all tissues during the embryonic life; if compared to adult ones, they are very much lower in the liver, heart and muscle, but higher in the brain, even in 8 day-old chick. 4. Short chain esterified, carnitine reaches a maximum on 18th day of egg incubation in the liver, brain and heart; in the muscle it stays on constant levels until this day and then rapidly increases so that at hatching it doubles the values. 5. The short chain esterified to free carnitine percentage ratio peaks in all tissues on 18th day of development, attaining figures which are well above those determined in the grown chick.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Coenzyme A and carnitine distribution in normal and ischemic hearts.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The distribution of coenzyme A and carnitine between the mitochondrial and cytosolic compartments was determined in rat heart ventricular muscle. The CoA and carnitine levels of homogenate, mitochondrial, and postmitochondrial fractions were determined in nonperfused hearts and in hearts that were perfused under control and ischemic conditions. Using the mitochondrial marker enzymes, citrate synthase and cytochrome c oxidase, the cellular content of mitochondrial protein was determined to be 53 +/- 1.0 (nonperfused), 53.5 +/- 1.5 (control), and 58.1 +/- 2.2 (ischemic) mg/g of wet heart muscle. These values were used to calculate the contribution of the CoA and carnitine located in the mitochondrial compartment to the total cellular levels of CoA and carnitine. Under both control and ischemic conditions, approximately 95% of the cellular CoA was mitochondrial. The percentage of the total cellular carnitine associated with the mitochondria increased from 8 to 9% in nonperfused and control hearts to 25% during ischemia, indicating that a net transfer of carnitine occurred from the cytosol to the mitochondrial matrix.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of this investigation was to describe the dynamics of carnitine metabolism during an acute episode of exercise. Twenty-eight subjects (14 male; 14 female) exercised for 40 min on a bicycle ergometer at 55% of their maximal aerobic capacities. Blood samples were obtained at rest, 10, 20, 30, and 40 min of exercise, and 15-min postexercise. Muscle biopsies of the vastus lateralis were performed before and after exercise. Results demonstrated that the percent of acylated plasma carnitine increased significantly (P less than 0.05) across all subjects from 17.3% at rest to 22.3% by 40 min of exercise and continued to increase to 22.8% 15-min postexercise. Total muscle carnitine levels fell significantly (P less than 0.001) across all subjects from 4.21 (1.27) (means +/- SD) mumol/g wet weight at rest to 3.29 (1.27) mumol/g wet weight after exercise. Well-trained males and females had almost identical levels of muscle carnitine [4.35(1.86) and 4.34 (0.64) mumol/g wet weight, respectively]. These levels were somewhat higher but not significantly higher than their moderately trained counterparts [3.86(1.34) and 4.28(1.18) males and females, respectively]. Carnitine palmitoyl transferase (E.C. 2.3.1.21) activity also declined significantly (P less than 0.05) across all subjects after exercise. This study is the first to demonstrate a potential loss of acylated carnitine forms from muscle to plasma during acute exercise, possibly reflecting an increase in carnitine turnover. Alterations in carnitine status may represent another metabolic adaptation to chronic exercise training.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-alpha activators on the liver is well established, but the other effects on muscle and adipose tissue about lipid metabolism and insulin sensitivity are not clear. We investigated whether PPAR-alpha activation affects adiposity of skeletal muscle as well as adipose tissue and improves insulin sensitivity in spontaneous type 2 diabetes model, Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats. Thirty-three weeks of aged, 20 male OLETF rats were divided into two groups. Control group (n=10) was fed with chow and treatment group (n=10) with chow contained fenofibrate for 7 weeks. At the age of 40 weeks, all rats were examined with MRI, intravenous glucose tolerance test, and then sacrificed for measurement of fat mass and RNA analyses. The total fat (the sum of subcutaneous, mesenteric, epididymal, and retroperitoneal fat pads) measured by dissection was significantly reduced in treatment group. The signal intensity of muscular adiposity was significantly decreased in treatment group. The mRNA levels of FAT/CD36 and mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (M-CPT I) in liver were remarkably increased. Fasting plasma insulin and leptin levels, insulin response after intravenous glucose loading and homeostasis model assessment insulin resistance (HOMA(IR)) index were lowered in treatment group. Fenofibrate increase mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation in liver but not in skeletal muscle and lower the plasma levels of triglyceride and free fatty acid. It might result in reduction of adiposity of truncal adipose tissue and skeletal muscle. We suggest that reduction of adiposity in trunk and skeletal muscle might improve insulin sensitivity.  相似文献   

18.
Liver and testis slices convert 6-N-trimethyl-lysine into 4-N-trimethylaminobutyrate and carnitine. Adipose, skeletal muscle, heart, or kidney tissues metabolize trimethyl-lysine into trimethylaminobutyrate but not into carnitine. Trimethylaminobutyrate hydroxylation, forming carnitine, occurs in liver and to a minor degree in testis. Liver is the primary site of carnitine biosynthesis in the rat.  相似文献   

19.
Maintaining hyperinsulinemia ( approximately 160 mU/l) during steady-state hypercarnitinemia ( approximately 550 mumol/l) increases skeletal muscle total carnitine (TC) content by approximately 15% within 5 h. The aim of the present study was to further examine the relationship between serum insulin concentration and skeletal muscle carnitine accumulation by attempting to identify the serum insulin concentration at which this stimulatory effect of insulin on carnitine retention becomes apparent. On four randomized experimental visits, eight healthy men (body mass index 23.8 +/- 0.9 kg/m(2)) underwent a 6-h euglycemic insulin clamp of 5, 30, 55, or 105 mU x m(-2) x min(-1) accompanied by a 5-h iv infusion of l-carnitine (15 mg/kg bolus followed by 10 mg x kg(-1) x h(-1)). The clamps produced steady-state serum insulin concentrations of 10.1 +/- 0.5, 48.8 +/- 1.0, 88.9 +/- 2.8, and 173.9 +/- 6.5 mU/l, respectively. During l-carnitine infusion, plasma TC concentration remained above 450 mumol/l during all four visits. However, there was a significant treatment effect of insulin (P < 0.001), such that by the end of infusion the plasma TC concentration in the 55- and 105-mU clamps was lower than that seen in the 5- (P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively) and 30-mU (P < 0.01) clamps. The findings demonstrate that only high circulating serum insulin concentrations (> or =90 mU/l) are capable of stimulating skeletal muscle carnitine accumulation. This is of relevance to athletes, and the treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes, where increasing skeletal muscle carnitine content may be used as tool to modify skeletal muscle energy metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
Effect of ascorbic acid deficiency on the in vivo synthesis of carnitine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of ascorbate deficiency on carnitine biosynthesis was investigated in young male guinea pigs. Liver and kidney carnitine levels were not affected by the deficiency, but scorbutic animals had 50% less carnitine in heart and skeletal muscle than control animals. Labeled carnitine precursors, 6-N-tri-methyl-L-lysine and 4-N-trimethylaminobutyrate, both of which require ascorbate for their enzymatic hydroxylation, were injected into the vena cava of control, pair-fed and scorbutic animals. The distribution of isotope in compounds present in the liver and kidney after 1 h was determined. The uptake of trimethyllysine by the liver was less than 2% in 1 h, while the kidney took up approx. 20% of the 14C. Control and pair-fed animals converted trimethyllysine to kidney trimethylaminobutyrate 8--10 times as well as did scorbutic animals. Trimethylaminobutyrate hydroxylase, present in the liver but almost absent from the kidney, converted nearly all of substrate taken up by the liver to carnitine in both the scorbutic and control animals.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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