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Title: Effect of tryptophan and its metabolites on gluconeogenesis in mammalian tissues. Author: Pogson CI, Crisp DM, Smith SA. Journal: Acta Vitaminol Enzymol; 1975; 29(1-6):232-5. PubMed ID: 1244097. Abstract: In parenchymal cells from starved mice L-tryptophan is a potent inhibitor of gluconeogenesis from substrates giving rise to oxaloacetate. Quinolinate yields a different pattern of inhibition and is generally much less effective. Tryptamine, indole 3-acetaldehyde and indole 3-acetate are equally as effective as tryptophan. Tryptamine inhibition alone may be overcome by pargyline; serotonin does not prevent the inhibition due to tryptophan. In kidney slices from starved rats, however, tryptophan has no effect on gluconeogenesis. Indole 3-acetate is also relatively ineffective, but quinolinate is signficiantly more potent than in liver; at 0.1mM, glucose production from lactate is 50% inhibited. Quinolinate is less effective with citric acid cycle substrates; the pattern of inhibition is consistent with a direct action on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. There is no evidence that glutamate dehydrogenase is simultaneously inhibited.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]