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  • Title: Metabolism of glutamine and glutamate by rat renal tubules. Study with 15N and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.
    Author: Nissim I, Yudkoff M, Segal S.
    Journal: J Biol Chem; 1985 Nov 15; 260(26):13955-67. PubMed ID: 2865260.
    Abstract:
    Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was utilized to study the metabolism of [15N]glutamate, [2-15N]glutamine, and [5-15N]glutamine in isolated renal tubules prepared from control and chronically acidotic rats. The main purpose was to determine the nitrogen sources utilized by the kidney in various acid-base states for ammoniagenesis. Incubations were performed in the presence of 2.5 mM 15N-labeled glutamine or glutamate. Experiments with [5-15N]glutamine showed that in control animals approximately 90% of ammonia nitrogen was derived from 5-N of glutamine versus 60% in renal tubules from acidotic rats. Experiments with [2-15N]glutamine or [15N]glutamate indicated that in chronic acidosis approximately 30% of ammonia nitrogen was derived either from 2-N of glutamine or glutamate-N by the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase. Flux through glutamate dehydrogenase was 6-fold higher in chronic acidosis versus control. No 15NH3 could be detected in renal tubules from control rats when [2-15N]glutamine was the substrate. The rates of 15N transfer to other amino acids and to the 6-amino groups of the adenine nucleotides were significantly higher in normal renal tubules versus those from chronically acidotic rats. In tubules from chronically acidotic rats, 15N abundance in 15NH3 and the rate of 15NH3 appearance were significantly higher than that of either the 6-amino group of adenine nucleotides or the 15N-amino acids studied. The data indicate that glutamate dehydrogenase activity rather than glutamate transamination is primarily responsible for augmented ammoniagenesis in chronic acidosis. The contribution of the purine nucleotide cycle to ammonia formation appears to be unimportant in renal tubules from chronically acidotic rats.
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