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Colonic luminal ammonia and portal blood l-glutamine and l-arginine concentrations: a possible link between colon mucosa and liver ureagenesis
Authors:Eklou-Lawson  Mamy  Bernard  Françoise  Neveux  Nathalie  Chaumontet  Catherine  Bos  Cécile  Davila-Gay  Anne-Marie  Tomé  Daniel  Cynober  Luc  Blachier  François
Institution:1.INRA, CNRH-IdF, AgroParisTech, UMR 914 Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, 16 rue Claude Bernard, 75005, Paris, France
;2.INRA, Unité d’Ecologie et de Physiologie du Système Digestif, 78350, Jouy-en-Josas, France
;3.APHP Laboratoire de Biochimie, Hopital Hôtel-Dieu, 75004, Paris, France
;4.Laboratoire de Biologie de la Nutrition, Faculté de Pharmacie, Université Paris Descartes, EA 2498, 75006, Paris, France
;
Abstract:The highest ammonia concentration in the body is found in the colon lumen and although there is evidence that this metabolite can be absorbed through the colonic epithelium, there is little information on the capacity of the colonic mucosa to transfer and metabolize this compound. In the present study, we used a model of conscious pig with a canula implanted into the proximal colon to inject endoluminally increasing amounts of ammonium chloride and to measure during 5 h the kinetics of ammonia and amino acid concentration changes in the portal and arterial blood. By injecting as a single dose from 1 to 5 g ammonia into the colonic lumen, a dose-related increase in ammonia concentration in the portal blood was recorded. Ammonia concentration remained unchanged in the arterial blood except for the highest dose tested, i.e. 5 g which thus apparently exceeds the hepatic ureagenesis capacity. By calculating the apparent net ammonia absorption, it was determined that the pig colonic epithelium has the capacity to absorb 4 g ammonia. Ammonia absorption through the colonic epithelium was concomitant with increase of l-glutamine and l-arginine concentrations in the portal blood. This coincided with the expression of both glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase in isolated colonic epithelial cells. Since l-glutamine and l-arginine are known to represent activators for liver ureagenesis, we propose that increased portal concentrations of these amino acids following increased ammonia colonic luminal concentration represent a metabolic link between colon mucosa and liver urea biosynthesis.
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