Abstract: | Abstract— When day-old chicks were injected intraperitoneally with 1.62mmoles of l -phenylalanine, they developed a condition resembling narcosis. Simultaneously, whole brain levels of phenylalanine were 2–4 μmol/g, whereas those in control brain were 0.06 μmol/g. Examination of some glycolytic intermediates in the brain revealed significant decreases in fructose-1,6-diphosphate, l -α-glycerol phosphate and lactate, in comparison to the levels of these compounds in the saline-injected control animals. Levels of glucose and glucose-6-phosphate either increased or did not change, whereas levels of glycogen did not differ significantly. Phosphocreatine increased reciprocally with the decrease in inorganic phosphate. The levels of adenine nucleotide (energy charge) were not affected. Utilization of cerebral high-energy phosphates was depressed by 50–70 per cent when determined as a function of metabolic rate in the brain at 15- and 30-s periods of ischaemia according to the ‘closed-system’ technique. Explanations for these data have been examined, such as toxicity of phenylacetate and inhibition of glycolytic enzymes by phenylpyruvate and l -phenylalanine and their relevance to this study is discussed. |