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The regulation of phenylalanine hydroxylase in rat tissues in vivo. The maintenance of high plasma phenylalanine concentrations in suckling rats: a model for phenylketonuria.
Authors:J A Delvalle and  O Greengard
Abstract:Maximum inhibition of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity in the liver (85%) and in the kidney (50%) of suckling rats required the administration of over 9 mumol of p-chlorophenylalanine/10g body weight. Despite the decrease in the total activity from 184 to 34 units per 10g body weight, the injection of as much as 26 mumol of phenylalanine was required for its concentration in plasma to be still considerably elevated 12h later. In rats injected with p-chlorophenylalanine every 48h and with phenylalanine every 24h from 3 to 18 days of age, the hepatic and renal phenylalanine hydroxylase remained inhibited, whereas the activities of three other hepatic enzymes were unchanged. There was about 20% inhibition of brain and body growth, but no interference with the developmental formation of several cerebral enzymes (four dehydrogenases, hexokinase and glutaminase) was detected. In the course of this prolonged treatment, the phenylalanine concentrations in plasma increased gradually; on day 2 and day 8 (measured 12h after the last injection) they were 800 and 1395 nmol/ml respectively; on day 15, 12 and 18h after the usual injection, the values were 2030 and 1030 respectively as opposed to the 96 nmol in untreated rats. This degree of hyperphenylalaninaemia, persisting for 18h per day throughout a critical period of development, fulfils the primary criterion of a suitable animal model for phenylketonuria.
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