Reduction of the level of the glycine cleavage system in the rat liver resulting from administration of dipropylacetic acid: An experimental approach to hyperglycinemia

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Abstract

Prolonged administration of dipropylacetic acid, a branched-chain fatty acid, reduced the glycine cleavage activity in the liver of rat to about one-third of the activity in the control rat. The reduction of the activity appeared to be due mainly to reduction of the level of P-protein, a pyridoxal phosphate enzyme, which is responsible for the first step of the glycine cleavage, although dipropylacetic acid was also found to inhibit the activity of P-protein in vitro in a noncompetitive but partially competitive manner with respect to glycine. The rat treated with dipropylacetic acid may provide an experimental approach for the biochemical study of hyperglycinemia which accompanies to metabolic disorders of branchedchain keto acids. In the dipropylacetic acid-treated rat, however, the glycine concentration in the serum was not appreciably elevated and this may be accounted for by the fact that the activities of both the glycine cleavage system and serine dehydratase are considerably higher in the rat liver as compared with those in other animals including human.

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    This work was supported in part by grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Public Health and Welfare, Japan and from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan (No. 357099).

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