| Literature DB >> 24302920 |
Abstract
In a contribution to this Research Topic Erkki Somersalo and Daniela Calvetti carried out a mathematical analysis of neurotransmitter pathways in brain, modeling compartmental nitrogen flux among several major participants - ammonia, glutamine, glutamate, GABA, and selected amino acids. This analysis is important because cerebral nitrogen metabolism is perturbed in many diseases, including liver disease and inborn errors of the urea cycle. These diseases result in an elevation of blood ammonia, which is neurotoxic. Here, a brief description is provided of the discovery of cerebral metabolic compartmentation of nitrogen metabolism - a key feature of cerebral glutamate-glutamine and GABA-glutamine cycles. The work of Somersalo and Calvetti is discussed as a model for future studies of normal and pathological cerebral ammonia metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: GABA–glutamine cycle; branched-chain amino acid branched-chain keto acid shuttle; cerebral nitrogen metabolism; glutamate–glutamine cycle; metabolic compartmentation
Year: 2013 PMID: 24302920 PMCID: PMC3831341 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2013.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Major routes for nitrogen homeostasis in the brain with emphasis on the central importance of ammonia. Abbreviations: AA, amino acid; αKA, α-keto acid; αKG, α-ketoglutarate; A–V, arterial–venous; BBB, blood–brain barrier; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; GDH, glutamate dehydrogenase; GS, glutamine synthetase; PAG, phosphate-activated glutaminase; PC, pyruvate carboxylase. Enzyme reactions: (1) GS, (2) PAG, (3) GDH, (4) various αKG/glutamate-linked aminotransferases. Tracer studies with [13N]ammonia have shown that about 25–40% of the tracer is taken up in a single pass through the brain (2, 5, 6). Most of this blood-derived [13N]ammonia (as well as CSF-derived [13N]ammonia) is rapidly trapped in the astrocyte compartment as L-[amide-13N]glutamine by the action of GS. The cerebral trapping of blood-derived [13N]ammonia suggests that there should be an A–V difference for ammonia across normal brain. However, the concentration of ammonia in blood is relatively low (<40 μM in normal human blood and <80 μM in normal rat blood). As a result, a cerebral A–V difference for ammonia is difficult to measure in normoammonemia, although it is well documented to occur during hyperammonemia [reviewed by (10)]. A net cerebral uptake of many AAs has been demonstrated for healthy human volunteers in the post absorptive state (9). In order to maintain cerebral nitrogen balance some glutamine is released to the blood/CSF, a process that is more pronounced during hyperammonemia [reviewed by (10)]. As a result, the concentration of glutamine in the normal CSF/extracerebral fluid is relatively high and much higher than that of any other amino acid (49). Many endogenous reactions contribute to the cerebral ammonia metabolic pool, but especially the PAG and GDH reactions (10). As a result of rapid removal of this ammonia as glutamine there is an ammonia concentration gradient from the neurons to the astrocytes, maintained by diffusion of NH3 and active transport of [c.f. (43)]. During the glutamate–glutamine cycle, approximately one equivalent of nitrogen enters the astrocytes as glutamate and approximately two equivalents exit as glutamine. One equivalent of nitrogen in glutamine is readily obtained from ammonia, which is incorporated into the amide position. The other nitrogen in glutamine is derived from glutamate. However, a portion of this glutamate is metabolized to αKG and ammonia by the action of GDH. Moreover, some carbon/nitrogen originating in glutamate is lost when glutamine exits the brain. Glutamate carbon may be replenished in astrocytes by anaplerotic mechanisms, most notably pyruvate carboxylase (PC). [PC activity is present exclusively in astrocytes, and its activity has been estimated to be about 37% that of the cerebral glutamine synthesis rate (50).] Glutamate nitrogen is replenished in the astrocyte by transamination reactions between αKG and a suitable AA, generating the corresponding αKA. Leucine is an especially favorable aminotransferase partner in astrocytes, because (1) it is readily taken up across the BBB (9), (2) blood-derived leucine is metabolized in the small compartment (i.e., astrocytes) (37, 38), and (3) both astrocytes and neurons contain appreciable branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase activity (34, 35). Another possible aminotransferase partner in the astrocytes is aspartate (24, 48). Note: (1) for simplicity, the GABA–glutamine cycle is not shown as it is considerably slower than the glutamate–glutamine cycle; (2) endogenously generated ammonia is depicted as NH3 (but represents ); (3) enzyme cofactors are not shown; (4) tracer studies show that the cerebral GDH reaction is reversible, but as discussed in the text the net direction of the GDH reaction in both astrocytes and neurons is likely in the direction of glutamate oxidation to αKG and ammonia; and (5) possible movements of αKAs between neurons and astrocytes (required for carbon balance) are not shown.