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1.
This study was performed to analyze the effects of glutamate and the epileptogenic agent pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) on neuronal glucose metabolism. Cerebellar granule neurons were incubated for 2 h in medium containing 3 mM [U-(13)C]glucose, with and without 0.25 mM glutamate and/or 10 mM PTZ. In the presence of PTZ, decreased glucose consumption with unchanged lactate release was observed, indicating decreased glucose oxidation. PTZ also slowed down tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle activity as evidenced by the decreased amounts of labeled aspartate and [1,2-(13)C]glutamate. When glutamate was present, glucose consumption was also decreased. However, the amount of glutamate, derived from [U-(13)C]glucose via the first turn of the TCA cycle, was increased. The decreased amount of [1,2-(13)C]glutamate, derived from the second turn in the TCA cycle, and increased amount of aspartate indicated the dilution of label due to the entrance of unlabeled glutamate into TCA cycle. In the presence of glutamate plus PTZ, the effect of PTZ was enhanced by glutamate. Labeled alanine was detected only in the presence of glutamate plus PTZ, which indicated that oxaloacetate was a better amino acid acceptor than pyruvate. Furthermore, there was also evidence for intracellular compartmentation of oxaloacetate metabolism. Glutamate and PTZ caused similar metabolic changes, however, via different mechanisms. Glutamate substituted for glucose as energy substrate in the TCA cycle, whereas, PTZ appeared to decrease mitochondrial activity.  相似文献   

2.
Cultured neocortical neurons were incubated in medium containing [U-13C]glucose (0.5 mM) and in some cases unlabeled glutamine (0.5 mM). Subsequently the cells were "superfused" for investigation of the effect of depolarization by 55 mM K+. Cell extracts were analyzed by 13C magnetic resonance spectroscopy and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry to determine incorporation of 13C in glutamate, GABA, aspartate and fumarate. The importance of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle for conversion of the carbon skeleton of glutamine to GABA was evident from the effect of glutamine on the labeling pattern of GABA and glutamate. Moreover, analysis of the labeling patterns of glutamate in particular indicated a depolarization induced increased oxidative metabolism. This effect was only observed in glutamate and not in neurotransmitter GABA. Based on this a hypothesis of mitochondrial compartmentation may be proposed in which mitochondria associated with neurotransmitter synthesis are distinct from those aimed at energy production and influenced by depolarization. The hypothesis of mitochondrial compartmentation was further supported by the finding that the total percent labeling of fumarate and aspartate differed significantly from each other. This can only be explained by the existence of multiple TCA cycles with different turnover rates.  相似文献   

3.
Glutamate neurotoxicity is implicated in most neurodegenerative diseases, and in the present study the long-term effects of the glutamate agonist kainic acid (KA) on cerebellar neurons are investigated. Primary cell cultures, mainly consisting of glutamatergic granule neurons, were cultured in medium containing 0.05 or 0.50 mM KA for 7 days and subsequently incubated in medium containing [U-13C]glutamate or [U-13C]glutamine. The amount of protein and number of cells were greatly reduced in cultures exposed to 0.50 mM KA compared to those exposed to 0.05 mM KA. Glutamine consumption was not affected by KA concentration, whereas that of glutamate was decreased by high KA, confirming reduction in glutamate transport reported earlier. Neurons cultured with 0.50 mM KA and incubated with glutamate contained decreased amounts of glutamate, aspartate and GABA compared to those cultured with 0.05 mM KA. Incubation of cells exposed to 0.50 mM KA with glutamine led to an increased amount of glutamate compared to cells exposed to 0.05 mM KA, whereas the intracellular amounts of aspartate and GABA remained unaffected by KA concentration. Furthermore, mitochondrial metabolism of -[U-13C]ketoglutarate derived from [U-13C]glutamate and [U-13C]glutamine was significantly reduced by 0.50 mM KA. The results presented illustrate differential vulnerability to KA and can only be understood in terms of inter- and intracellular compartmentation.  相似文献   

4.
Glutamatergic signal transduction occurs in CNS white matter, but quantitative data on glutamate uptake and metabolism are lacking. We report that the level of the astrocytic glutamate transporter GLT in rat fimbria and corpus callosum was approximately 35% of that in parietal cortex; uptake of [3H]glutamate was 24 and 43%, respectively, of the cortical value. In fimbria and corpus callosum levels of synaptic proteins, synapsin I and synaptophysin were 15-20% of those in cortex; the activities of glutamine synthetase and phosphate-activated glutaminase, enzymes involved in metabolism of transmitter glutamate, were 11-25% of cortical values, and activities of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases were 50-70% of cortical values. The glutamate level in fimbria and corpus callosum was 5-6 nmol/mg tissue, half the cortical value. These data suggest a certain capacity for glutamatergic neurotransmission. In optic and trigeminal nerves, [3H]glutamate uptake was < 10% of the cortical uptake. Formation of [14C]glutamate from [U-14C]glucose in fimbria and corpus callosum of awake rats was 30% of cortical values, in optic nerve it was 13%, illustrating extensive glutamate metabolism in white matter in vivo. Glutamate transporters in brain white matter may be important both physiologically and during energy failure when reversal of glutamate uptake may contribute to excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Hepatocyte heterogeneity in glutamate uptake by isolated perfused rat liver   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Glutamate is simultaneously taken up and released by perfused rat liver, as shown by 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate in the presence of a net glutamate release by the liver, turning to a net glutamate uptake at portal glutamate concentrations above 0.3 mM. 14CO2 production from portal [1-14C]glutamate is decreased by about 60% in the presence of ammonium ions. This effect is not observed during inhibition of glutamine synthetase by methionine sulfoximine. 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate is not influenced by glutamine. Also, when glutamate accumulates intracellularly during the metabolism of glutamine (added at high concentrations, 5 mM), 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate is not affected. If labeled glutamate is generated intracellularly from added [U-14C]proline, stimulation of glutamine synthesis by ammonium ions did not affect 14CO2 production from [U-14C]proline. After induction of a perivenous liver cell necrosis by CCL4, i.e. conditions associated with an almost complete loss of perivenous glutamine synthesis but no effect on periportal urea synthesis, 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate is decreased by about 70%. The results are explained by hepatocyte heterogeneity in glutamate metabolism and indicate a predominant uptake of glutamate (that reaches the liver by the vena portae) by the small perivenous population of glutamine-synthesizing hepatocytes, whereas glutamate production from glutamine or proline is predominantly periportal. In view of the size of the glutamine synthetase-containing hepatocyte pool [Gebhardt, R. and Mecke, D. (1983) EMBO J. 2, 567-570], glutamate transport capacity of these hepatocytes would be about 20-fold higher as compared to other hepatocytes.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of methylmercury (MeHg) on [U-13C]glutamate metabolism was studied in cerebellar astrocytes using 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The cells were preincubated in medium containing 25 or 50 microM MeHg and 10% fetal calf serum for 4h and then in medium with [U-13C]glutamate (0.5mM) for 2h. Labeled glutamate, glutamine and aspartate were observed both in the cell extracts and media, labeled glutathione in the cell extracts and labeled lactate and alanine in the media. The amount of glutamate removed from the media was decreased in the 50 microM MeHg group, furthermore, the levels of both labeled and unlabeled glutamine were decreased. This might indicate a decreased synthesis and/or increased degradation. An increase was observed for glutathione in the 25 microM group, which might be due to an upregulated synthesis of glutathione in response to the toxic effects of MeHg. The percentage of [U-13C]glutamate used for the synthesis of metabolites via the tricarboxylic acid cycle was increased in the presence of 50 microM MeHg. However, the percentage used for energy production was decreased in both groups, indicating selective mitochondrial vulnerability due to the inhibitory effect of MeHg.  相似文献   

8.
Mouse cerebral cortical mini-slices were used in a superfusion system to monitor depolarization-induced (55 mM K+) release of preloaded [2,3-3H]GABA and to investigate the biosynthesis of glutamate, GABA and aspartate during physiological and depolarizing (55 mM K+) conditions from either [1,6-13C]glucose or [U-13C]glutamine. Depolarization-induced GABA release could be reduced (50%) by the GABA transport inhibitor tiagabine (25 μM) or by replacing Ca2+ with Co2+. In the presence of both tiagabine and Co2+ (1 mM), release was abolished completely. The release observed in the presence of 25 μM tiagabine thus represents vesicular release. Superfusion in the presence of [1,6-13C]glucose led to considerable labeling in the three amino acids, the labeling in glutamate and aspartate being increased after depolarization. This condition had no effect on GABA labeling. For all three amino acids, the distribution of label in the different carbon atoms revealed on increased tricarboxylic acid (TCA) activity during depolarization. When [U-13C]glutamine was used as substrate, labeling in glutamate was higher than that in GABA and aspartate and the fraction of glutamate and aspartate being synthesized by participation of the TCA cycle was increased by depolarization, an effect not seen for GABA. However, GABA synthesis reflected TCA cycle involvement to a much higher extent than for glutamate and aspartate. The results show that this preparation of brain tissue with intact cellular networks is well suited to study metabolism and release of neurotransmitter amino acids under conditions mimicking neural activity. Special issue article in honor of Dr. Ricardo Tapia.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract— The amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism of confluent cultures of C-6 glioma cells has been investigated. It was observed that the presence of glutamine in the incubation fluid was essential to maintain high glutamine levels in the cells during a 2 h incubation. When cells were incubated in a cerebrospinal fluid-like medium glutamate, glutamine, aspartate and γ-aminobutyrate (GABA) levels were comparable to those occurring in whole forebrain of adult rat in vivo. Glucose uptake was high, approx 1 μmol/mg protein/2 h, 50% of which was accounted for by lactate production. Of the remaining glucose uptake a substantial proportion was unaccounted for by known oxygen-coupled citric acid cycle flux, or glycogen or amino acid synthesis. Interestingly, the cells released into the medium significant amounts of the neuroinhibitory amino acids, GABA and glycine, and rapidly cleared the medium of the neuroexcitatory amino acids glutamate and aspartate. Metabolism of [2-14C]glucose and [3H]acetate by the cells indicated rapid labelling of the glutamate and aspartate pools of the cells by glucose in 1 h, but the relative specific activities of glutamine and GABA were much lower. The metabolism of tracer concentrations of [3H]acetate to glutamate by the cells indicated greater dilution of this isotope compared to that of labelled glucose. However, the ratio of 3H to 14C radioactivity in glutamate and other amino acids was similar to that in the mixture of glucose and acetate added to the medium. Therefore, some active route of acetate metabolism which communicates metabolically with the route of glucose metabolism to glutamate appears to exist in the cells. Significant acetate activation and fatty acid turnover would explain the present results. Some of the amino acid labelling patterns observed in these studies are not consistent with these glial-like cells behaving as models for the small compartment of amino acid metabolism in brain. Enzyme measurements corroborated the metabolic studies. Glutamate decarboxylase activity was 3–10% of the level found in whole brain. GABA transaminase was also low compared to brain as was glutamine synthetase. Glutamate dehydrogenase was present at levels equal to or higher than those of whole brain.  相似文献   

10.
Cultures of dissociated cerebella from 7-day-old mice were maintained in vitro for 1-13 days. GABA biosynthesis and degradation were studied during development in culture and pharmacological agents were used to identify the enzymes involved. The amount of GABA increased, whereas that of glutamate was unchanged during the first 5 days and both decreased thereafter. The presence of aminooxyacetic acid (AOAA, 10 microM) which inhibits transaminases and other pyridoxal phosphate dependent enzymes including GABA-transaminase (GABA-T), in the culture medium caused an increase in the intracellular amount of GABA and a decrease in glutamate. The GABA content was also increased following exposure to the specific GABA-T inhibitor gamma-vinyl GABA. From day 6 in culture (day 4 when cultured in the presence of AOAA) GABA levels in the medium were increased compared to that in medium from 1-day-old cultures. Synthesis of GABA during the first 3 days was demonstrated by the finding that incubation with either [1-(13)C]glucose or [U-(13)C]glutamine led to formation of labeled GABA. Synthesis of GABA after 1 week in culture, when the enzymatic machinery is considered to be at a more differentiated level, was shown by labeling from [U-(13)C]glutamine added on day 7. Altogether the findings show continuous GABA synthesis and degradation throughout the culture period in the cerebellar neurons. At 10 microM AOAA, GABA synthesis from [U-(13)C]glutamine was not affected, indicating that transaminases are not involved in GABA synthesis and thus excluding the putrescine pathway. At a concentration of 5 mM AOAA GABA labeling was, however, abolished, showing that glutamate decarboxylase, which is inhibited at this level of AOAA, is responsible for GABA synthesis in the cerebellar cultures. In conclusion, the present study shows that GABA synthesis is taking place via GAD in a subpopulation of the cerebellar neurons, throughout the culture period.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: Uptake and metabolism of glutamate was studied in the C-6 glioma cell line grown in the absence or presence of dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP). Glutamate and aspartate uptake were competitive in cells grown under both conditions. Increased [K+] in the medium caused a significant decrease in the uptake of both amino acids. A small part of this decrease (<25%) was due to an enhanced efflux of tissue amino acid. The effects of increased [K+] were observed whether or not the [Na+] in the medium was concomitantly decreased. In cells grown in the presence of 1 mM dbcAMP for 48 h, glutamate uptake and metabolism were altered. Tissue levels of glutamate, aspartate, glutamine, GABA, and alanine were generally less in treated than in naive cells. When incubated with 50 μM [U-14C]glutamate, there was significantly less incorporation of radioactivity into treated cells with time, resulting in greatly lowered specific radioactivities of glutamate, aspartate, and GABA. However, the rate of labeling of glutamine was greatly increased; this was consistent with the previously observed doubling in glutamine synthetase activity in dbcAMP-treated C-6 cells. Tissue glutamate decarboxylase activity was halved in treated cells, accounting for the large decrease in GABA labeling. The metabolic data suggested a decreased uptake of exogenous glutamate; in studies on initial rates of uptake, the Vmax of high-affinity glutamate uptake was decreased by 40%. This decrease was of the same order of magnitude as that observed in the metabolic experiments. Thus, in this glial model, both rapid, acute changes and slower, long-term changes in neuroactive amino acid metabolism were observed. Each of these conditions mimics a stimulus of neuronal origin, and the resulting changes could modulate extrasynaptic activity of neuroactive amino acids.  相似文献   

12.
The metabolism of [U-(13)C]lactate (1 mM) in the presence of unlabeled glucose (2.5 mM) was investigated in glutamatergic cerebellar granule cells, cerebellar astrocytes, and corresponding co-cultures. It was evident that lactate is primarily a neuronal substrate and that lactate produced glycolytically from glucose in astrocytes serves as a substrate in neurons. Alanine was highly enriched with (13)C in the neurons, whereas this was not the case in the astrocytes. Moreover, the cellular content and the amount of alanine released into the medium were higher in neurons than astrocytes. On incubation of the different cell types in medium containing alanine (1 mM), the astrocytes exhibited the highest level of accumulation. Altogether, these results indicate a preferential synthesis and release of alanine in glutamatergic neurons and uptake in cerebellar astrocytes. A new functional role of alanine may be suggested as a carrier of nitrogen from glutamatergic neurons to astrocytes, a transport that may operate to provide ammonia for glutamine synthesis in astrocytes and dispose of ammonia generated by the glutaminase reaction in glutamatergic neurons. Hence, a model of a glutamate-glutamine/lactate-alanine shuttle is presented. To elucidate if this hypothesis is compatible with the pattern of alanine metabolism observed in the astrocytes and neurons from cerebellum, the cells were incubated in a medium containing [(15)N]alanine (1 mM) and [5-(15)N]glutamine (0.5 mM), respectively. Additionally, neurons were incubated with [U-(13)C]glutamine to estimate the magnitude of glutamine conversion to glutamate. Alanine was labeled from [5-(15)N]glutamine to 3.3% and [U-(13)C]glutamate generated from [U-(13)C]glutamine was labeled to 16%. In spite of the modest labeling in alanine, it is clear that nitrogen from ammonia is transferred to alanine via transamination with glutamate formed by reductive amination of alpha-ketoglutarate. With regard to the astrocytic part of the shuttle, glutamine was labeled to 22% in one nitrogen atom whereas 3.2% was labeled in two when astrocytes were incubated in [(15)N]alanine. Moreover, in co-cultures, [U-(13)C]alanine labeled glutamate and glutamine equally, whereas [U-(13)C]lactate preferentially labeled glutamate. Altogether, these results support the role proposed above of alanine as a possible ammonia nitrogen carrier between glutamatergic neurons and surrounding astrocytes and they show that lactate is preferentially metabolized in neurons and alanine in astrocytes.  相似文献   

13.
The release of [3H]GABA formed from [3H]glutamate in rat hippocampal slices   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
to compare the storage and release of endogenous GABA, of [3H]GABA formed endogenously from glutamate, and of exogenous [14C]GABA, hippocampal slices were incubated with 5 microCi/ml [3,4-3H]1-glutamate and 0.5 microCi/ml [U-14C]GABA and then were superfused in the presence or absence of Ca+ with either 50 mM K+ or 50 microM veratridine. Endogenous GABA was determined by high performance liquid chromatography which separated labeled GABA from its precursors and metabolites. Exogenous [14C]GABA content of the slices declined spontaneously while endogenous GABA and endogenously formed [3H]GABA stayed constant over a 48 min period. In the presence of Ca+ 50 mM K+ and in the presence or absence of Ca2+ veratridine released exogenous [14C]GABA more rapidly than endogenous or endogenously formed [3H]GABA, the release of the latter two occurring always in parallel. The initial specific activity of released exogenous [14C]GABA was three times, while that of endogenously formed [3H]GABA was only 50% higher than that in the slices. There was an excess of endogenous GABA content following superfusion with 50 mM K+ and Ca2+, which did not occur in the absence of Ca2+ or after veratridine. The observation that endogenous GABA and [3H]GABA formed endogenously from glutamate are stored and released in parallel but differently from exogenous labelled GABA, suggests that exogenous [3H] glutamate can enter a glutamate pool that normally serves as precursor of GABA.  相似文献   

14.
1. Cerebral-cortex slices prelabelled with gamma-amino[1-(14)C]butyrate (GABA) were incubated in a glucose-saline medium. After the initial rapid uptake there was no appreciable re-entry of (14)C into the GABA pool, either from the medium or from labelled metabolites formed in the tissue. The kinetic constants of GABA metabolism were determined by computer simulation of the experimental results by using mathematical procedures. The GABA flux was estimated to be 0.03mumol per min/g, or about 8% of the total flux through the tricarboxylic acid cycle. It was found that the assumption of compartmentation did not greatly affect the estimates of the GABA flux. 2. The time-course of incorporation of (14)C into amino acids associated with the tricarboxylic acid cycle was followed with [1-(14)C]GABA and [U-(14)C]-glucose as labelled substrates. The results were consistent with the utilization of GABA via succinate. This was confirmed by determining the position of (14)C in the carbon skeletons of aspartate and glutamate formed after the oxidation of [1-(14)C]GABA. These results also indicated that under the experimental conditions the reversal of reactions catalysed by alpha-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and glutamate decarboxylase respectively was negligible. The conversion of [(14)C]GABA into gamma-hydroxybutyrate was probably also of minor importance, but decarboxylation of oxaloacetate did occur at a relatively slow rate. 3. When [1-(14)C]GABA was the labelled substrate there was evidence of a metabolic compartmentation of glutamate since, even before the peak of the incorporation of (14)C into glutamate had been reached, the glutamine/glutamate specific-radioactivity ratio was greater than unity. When [U-(14)C]glucose was oxidized this ratio was less than unity. The heterogeneity of the glutamate pool was indicated also by the relatively high specific radioactivity of GABA, which was comparable with that of aspartate during the whole incubation time (40min). The rates of equilibration of labelled amino acids between slice and medium gave evidence that the permeability properties of the glutamate compartments labelled as a result of oxidation of [1-(14)C]GABA were different from those labelled by the metabolism of [(14)C]glucose. The results showed therefore that in brain tissue incubated under the conditions used, the organization underlying metabolic compartmentation was preserved. The observed concentration ratios of amino acids between tissue and medium were also similar to those obtaining in vivo. These ratios decreased in the order: GABA>acidic acids>neutral amino acids>glutamine. 4. The approximate pool sizes of the amino acids in the different metabolic compartments were calculated. The glutamate content of the pool responsible for most of the labelling of glutamine during oxidation of [1-(14)C]GABA was estimated to be not more than 30% of the total tissue glutamate. The GABA content of the ;transmitter pool' was estimated to be 25-30% of the total GABA in the tissue. The structural correlates of metabolic compartmentation were considered.  相似文献   

15.
Glutamate metabolism was studied in co-cultures of mouse cerebellar neurons (predominantly glutamatergic) and astrocytes. One set of cultures was superfused (90 min) in the presence of either [U-13C]glucose (2.5 mM) and lactate (1 mM) or [U-13C]lactate (1 mM) and glucose (2.5 mM). Other sets of cultures were incubated in medium containing [U-13C]lactate (1 mM) and glucose (2.5 mM) for 4 h. Regardless of the experimental conditions cell extracts were analyzed using mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 13C labeling of glutamate was much higher than that of glutamine under all experimental conditions indicating that acetyl-CoA from both lactate and glucose was preferentially metabolized in the neurons. Aspartate labeling was similar to that of glutamate, especially when [U-13C]glucose was the substrate. Labeling of glutamate, aspartate and glutamine was lower in the cells incubated with [U-13C]lactate. The first part of the pyruvate recycling pathway, pyruvate formation, was detected in singlet and doublet labeling of alanine under all experimental conditions. However, full recycling, detectable in singlet labeling of glutamate in the C-4 position was only quantifiable in the superfused cells both from [U-13C]glucose and [U-13C]lactate. Lactate and alanine were mostly uniformly labeled and labeling of alanine was the same regardless of the labeled substrate present and higher than that of lactate when superfused in the presence of [U-13C]glucose. These results show that metabolism of pyruvate, the precursor for lactate, alanine and acetyl-CoA is highly compartmentalized. Special issue dedicated to John P. Blass.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Fructose and glutamate metabolism was monitored in cell suspensions of streptomyces parvulus by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance. The experiments were performed for cells grown with various 13C sources in a growth medium containing D-[U-13C]fructose, L-[13C]glutamate, or L-[U-13C]aspartate and with nonlabeled precursors to compare intracellular pools in S. parvulus cells at different periods of the cell life cycle. The transport of fructose into the cells was biphasic in nature; during rapid transport, mannitol, fructose, and glucose 6-phosphate were accumulated intracellularly, whereas during the passive diffusion of fructose, the intracellular carbohydrate pool comprised mainly trehalose (1,1'-alpha-alpha-D-glucose). The regulation of fructokinase activity by the intracellular intermediates may play an important role in fructose catabolism in S. parvulus. Transaldolase activity in S. parvulus was determined from the 13C nuclear magnetic resonance labeling pattern of trehalose carbons obtained from cells grown in medium containing either L-[U-13C]aspartate or L-[U-13C]glutamate. Only carbons 4, 5, and 6 of the disaccharide were labeled. Isotopomer analysis of the trehalose carbons led us to conclude that the flux through the reverse glycolytic pathway, condensation of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate with dihydroxyacetone phosphate, makes at best a minor contribution to the 13C-labeled glucose units observed in trehalose. The pentose pathway and transaldolase activity can explain the labeling pattern of 4,5,6-13C3 of trehalose. Moreover, the transfer of the 13C label of L-[U-13C]aspartate into the different isotopomers of trehalose C4, C5, and C6 by the transaldolase activity allowed us to calculate the relative fluxes from oxaloacetate via gluconeogenesis and through the tricarboxylic acid cycle. The ratio of the two fluxes is approximately 1. However, the main carbon source for trehalose synthesis in S. parvulus is fructose and not glutamate or aspartate. The 13C enrichment and isotopomer population, measured by nuclear magnetic resonance and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, of the actinomycin D peptide ring enabled us to specify the origins of the five amino acids of actinomycin D. Threonine and proline exhibited isotopomer populations similar to that of the extracellular L-[13C]glutamate, indicating that protein catabolism is the origin of their 13C label, whereas the isotopomer populations of sarcosine and N-methylvaline were similar to those of the new intracellular pool of S. parvulus that originated from D-[U-13C]fructose during the production of actinomycin D.  相似文献   

18.
[U-13C]Glutamate metabolism was studied in primary brain cell cultures. Cell extracts as well as redissolved lyophilized media were subjected to nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in order to identify13C labeled metabolites. Both neurons and astrocytes metabolized glutamate extensively with13C label appearing in aspartate in all cultures. Additionally, GABA is synthesized in the GABAergic cortical neurons. Labeling of lactate and glutamine was prominent in medium from astrocytes, but not detectable in cerebral cortical neurons. Cerebellar granule neurons showed some labeling of lactate. Glutamate derived from the first turn of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (1,2,3-13C3-isotopomer) is present in all cell types analyzed. However, glutamate derived from the second turn of the cycle was only detected in granule neurons. In astrocytes, the transaminase inhibitor aminooxyacetic acid not only abolished the appearance of aspartate, but also of the 1,2,3-13C3-isotopomer of glutamate, thus showing that transmination is necessary for the conversion of 2-oxoglutarate to glutamate. The entry of glutamate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle was, however, not seriously impaired. 3-nitropropionic acid abolished the appearance of aspartate, the 1,2,3-13C3-isotopomer of glutamate and lactate in cerebellar granule neurons. Special issue dedicated to Dr. Herman Bachelard.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract– Various aspects of amino acid metabolism were studied in striatum of rats with unilateral, kainic acid-induced lesions. Tissue slices were prepared from the lesioned and the contralateral, unlesioned, striatum. The preparations were incubated with a mixture of d -[2-14C]glucose and [3H]acetate in a Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate medium to evaluate oxidative metabolism. Glutamate and aspartate levels were decreased in the slices prepared from the lesioned striata by 35-40% and that of GABA by 75% compared to the levels found in the slices from the contralateral striata; glutamine levels were not different in the two preparations. Glucose utilization was decreased 60% in the slices from the lesioned striatum; this was caused not only by decreased levels of glutamate, aspartate and GABA but also by a decreased rate of labelling of glutamate and aspartate. On the other hand, the metabolism of [3H]acetate was greatly increased. The specific activities of glutamate and aspartate were 4-5-fold higher in the slices from kainic acid-lesioned striata; those of glutamine and GABA were unchanged. Thus, there was a 6-7-fold increase in the ratio of 3H to 14C in the specific activities of glutamate, aspartate and GABA with no change in this ratio in glutamine. The labelling of glutamine relative to that of glutamate, especially from [3H]acetate, suggested that the compartmentation of the glutamate-glutamine system was greatly altered in the kainate-lesioned striatum which now more closely resembled a single compartment system. The activities of lactate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, GABA transaminase and ‘cytoplasmic’ aspartate aminotransferase were decreased in homogenates of lesioned striatum. Succinate dehydrogenase, glutaminase (phosphate-activated) and ‘mitochondrial’ aspartate aminotransferase activities were unchanged whilst that of glutamine synthetase was increased. The results are consistent with hypotheses concerning the assignment of labelled acetate metabolism to glial cells as well as the distribution of the above enzymes between glia, neurones and nerve endings.  相似文献   

20.
One of the forms of phosphate activated glutaminase (PAG) is associated with the inner mitochondrial membrane. It has been debated whether glutamate formed from glutamine in the reaction catalyzed by PAG has direct access to mitochondrial or cytosolic metabolism. In this study, metabolism of [U-13C]glutamine (3 mM) or [U-13C]glutamate (10 mM) was investigated in isolated rat brain mitochondria. The presence of a functional tricarboxylic (TCA) cycle in the mitochondria was tested using [U-13C]succinate as substrate and extensive labeling in aspartate was seen. Accumulation of glutamine into the mitochondrial matrix was inhibited by histidine (15 mM). Extracts of mitochondria were analyzed for labeling in glutamine, glutamate and aspartate using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Formation of [U-13C]glutamate from exogenous [U-13C]glutamine was decreased about 50% (P < 0.001) in the presence of histidine. In addition, the 13C-labeled skeleton of [U-13C]glutamine was metabolized more vividly in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle than that from [U-13C]glutamate, even though glutamate was labeled to a higher extent in the latter condition. Collectively the results show that transport of glutamine into the mitochondrial matrix may be a prerequisite for deamidation by PAG. Special issue article in honor of Dr. Frode Fonnum. Lasse K. Bak and Elżbieta Ziemińska contributed equally to the experimental work described in this paper.  相似文献   

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