Literature DB >> 3777214

Renal regulation of interorgan glutamine flow in metabolic acidosis.

T C Welbourne, D Childress, G Givens.   

Abstract

The regulation of interorgan glutamine flow was studied in control and chronically metabolically acidotic rats. Net glutamine extraction or production across the kidneys, gut, liver, and hindquarters was determined in fasted anesthetized animals from organ blood flows and the arteriovenous glutamine concentration difference. In control animals glutamine flows from the hindquarters to the splanchnic bed. In chronic acidosis glutamine production by the hindquarters rose threefold and was redirected to the kidneys; splanchnic bed glutamine uptake was eliminated. Associated with this was a 39% fall and a 62% rise in arterial glutamine and ammonia concentrations, respectively. Removing the kidneys from the circulation returned arterial glutamine and ammonia concentrations to control nonacidotic levels within 30 min. Net glutamine production by the hindquarters decreased, whereas splanchnic bed glutamine extraction increased. Hindquarter glutamine production appears to be modulated by renal venous ammonia; splanchnic bed glutamine extraction is load dependent, reflecting the influence of renal glutamine consumption on the steady-state arterial levels. Thus the removal of the kidneys returns interorgan glutamine flow to that observed in nonacidotic animals consistent with a major role of the kidneys in regulating glutamine flow and nitrogen metabolism in chronic metabolic acidosis.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3777214     DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.1986.251.5.R859

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  9 in total

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2.  Adaptive alterations in cellular metabolism with malignant transformation.

Authors:  C P Fischer; B P Bode; W W Souba
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4.  Influence of hepatic innervation on renal glomerular filtration rate.

Authors:  F Lang; I Ottl; D Häussinger
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5.  Effects of methionine sulphoximine treatment on renal amino acid and ammonia metabolism in rats.

Authors:  S Heeneman; C H Dejong; N E Deutz
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6.  Glutamine and ketone-body metabolism in the gut of streptozotocin-diabetic rats.

Authors:  M S Ardawi
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1988-01-15       Impact factor: 3.857

7.  Loss of function mutation of the Slc38a3 glutamine transporter reveals its critical role for amino acid metabolism in the liver, brain, and kidney.

Authors:  Kessara Chan; Stephanie M Busque; Manuela Sailer; Claudia Stoeger; Stefan Bröer; Hannelore Daniel; Isabel Rubio-Aliaga; Carsten A Wagner
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Review 8.  Glutamine randomized studies in early life: the unsolved riddle of experimental and clinical studies.

Authors:  Efrossini Briassouli; George Briassoulis
Journal:  Clin Dev Immunol       Date:  2012-09-18

9.  NRF2 regulates the glutamine transporter Slc38a3 (SNAT3) in kidney in response to metabolic acidosis.

Authors:  Adam Lister; Soline Bourgeois; Pedro H Imenez Silva; Isabel Rubio-Aliaga; Philippe Marbet; Joanne Walsh; Luke M Shelton; Bettina Keller; Francois Verrey; Olivier Devuyst; Pieter Giesbertz; Hannelore Daniel; Christopher E Goldring; Ian M Copple; Carsten A Wagner; Alex Odermatt
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-04-04       Impact factor: 4.379

  9 in total

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