| Literature DB >> 16143284 |
Matthias Peltz1, Timothy T Hamilton, Tian-Teng He, Glenn A Adams, Seena Koshy, Shawn C Burgess, Robert Y Chao, Michael E Jessen, Dan M Meyer.
Abstract
Lungs harvested for transplantation utilize oxygen after procurement. We investigated the effects of storage solution substrate composition on pulmonary oxidative metabolism and energetics during the preservation interval. Rat lungs were harvested and stored at 10 degrees C in low-potassium dextran (LPD) solution. Groups of lungs were preserved with preservation solution containing 5mM carbon-13 ((13)C) labeled glucose or increasing concentrations of (13)C labeled pyruvate. Additional groups of rat lungs were studied with dichloroacetate (DCA) added to the pyruvate-modified preservation solutions. Oxidative metabolism (measured by (13)C-enrichment of glutamate) and adenine nucleotide levels were quantified. Increasing preservation solution pyruvate concentration augmented glutamate (13)C-enrichment up to a concentration of 32mM pyruvate. DCA further stimulated oxidative metabolism only at lower concentrations of pyruvate (4 and 8mM). ATP and ADP were not different among groups, but AMP levels were higher in the glucose group. These data suggest that altering the substrate composition of the preservation solution influences lung metabolism during allograft preservation for transplantation.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16143284 DOI: 10.1016/j.resp.2005.02.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Physiol Neurobiol ISSN: 1569-9048 Impact factor: 1.931