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  • 1
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: Portal-systemic shunting and hyperammonemia lead to an accumulation of the large neutral amino acids in brain and apparently alter transport of neutral amino acids across the blood-brain barrier. It has been proposed that portal-systemic shunting leads to a high brain concentration of glutamine, a product of cerebral ammonia detoxification, and thereby affects the transport of other neutral amino acids across the blood-brain barrier. To test this hypothesis, rats with a portacaval shunt were treated with l-methionine-dl-sulfoximine (MSO), an inhibitor of glutamine synthesis. Treatment with MSO resulted in lower concentrations of the neutral amino acids in brain of portacaval-shunted rats and a higher brain ammonia concentration, compared with untreated shunted rats. These results suggest that the accumulation of neutral amino acids in brain after portacaval shunt depends on the increased synthesis of glutamine in brain.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: The activity of the blood-brain neutral amino acid transport system is increased in rats infused with ammonium salts or rendered hyperammonemic by a portacaval anastomosis. This effect may be due to a direct action of ammonia or to some metabolic consequence of high ammonia levels, such as increased brain glutamine synthesis. To test these possibilities we evaluated the kinetic parameters of blood-brain transport of leucine and phenylalanine in control rats, in rats after continuous 24 h infusion of ammonium salts (NH4+= 2.5 mmol. kg−1 h−1), and in rats treated with methionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, before infusion of ammonium salts. In ammonia-infused rats without methionine sulfoximine treatment, the KD and Vmax of phenylalanine transport were increased, respectively, about 170% and 80% compared to controls, whereas the Km and Vmax of leucine transport were increased, respectively, about 100% and 200%. Electron microscopy demonstrated marked swelling of astrocytic processes around brain capillaries of ammonia-infused rats; however, capillary permeability to horseradish peroxidase apparently was not increased by ammonia infusion. Administration of methionine sulfoximine before ammonia infusion inhibited glutamine synthesis and prevented the changes in transport of leucine and phenylalanine, but apparently did not reverse the perivascular swelling. These results suggest that the ammonia-induced increase in the activity of transport of large neutral amino acids across the blood-brain barrier requires glutamine synthesis in brain, and is not a direct effect of ammonia.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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