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Involvement of the liver in the regulation of tryptophan availability. Possible role in the responses of liver and brain to starvation
Authors:David L. Bloxam  William H. Warren  Patricia J. White
Affiliation:Department of Pathology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Abstract:The concentrations of free and total (free plus albumin bound) tryptophan were measured in plasma of blood taken from the portal vein, hepatic vein and abdominal aorta of male rats, fed, and starved for one and three days. Liver and brain tryptophan concentrations were measured in similar groups of rats.On starvation, there was an increase in arterial plasma free tryptophan concentration which took place peripherally and was paralleled by an increase in brain tryptophan. In both the fed and starved rats, the portal vein concentrations of free tryptophan were high and as the blood flowed through the liver they were reduced to relatively low levels not directly related to the arterial values. All these changes were due to alterations in degree of binding of tryptophan to plasma albumin.The measurements of plasma total tryptophan concentrations showed that postabsorptively and during starvation there was a net uptake of tryptophan by the peripheral tissues (which included brain), but no overall fall in plasma concentration. At the same time, there was a net release from the liver, and to a lesser extent from the portal-drained tissues. The released tryptophan largely entered the albumin bound plasma pool. Accompanying the hepatic output was a fall in tryptophan concentration in the liver which was apparently caused by altered cell membrane transport.The results suggest (1) that the liver protects the brain from the high free tryptophan level in portal blood, (2) that the availability of tryptophan to the brain is maintained postabsorptively and during starvation by hepatic output into the albumin bound pool and (3) that this release of tryptophan from the liver and the fall in intracellular tryptophan concentration are initiated by altered membrane transport. The pattern of changes is consistent with a role for tryptophan in the mediation of changes in liver protein synthesis and gluconeogenesis and cerebral serotonin turnover on starvation.
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