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Title: Short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in rat liver in vivo. Author: Cooper AJ, Nieves E, Coleman AE, Filc-DeRicco S, Gelbard AS. Journal: J Biol Chem; 1987 Jan 25; 262(3):1073-80. PubMed ID: 2879838. Abstract: The short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in the livers of adult male, anesthetized rats was determined. Following a bolus injection of tracer quantities of [13N]ammonia into the portal vein, the single pass extraction was approximately 93%, in good agreement with the portal-hepatic vein difference of approximately 90%. High performance liquid chromatographic analysis of deproteinized liver samples indicated that labeled nitrogen is exchanged rapidly among components of: mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase reactions and cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase reactions (t1/2 for the exchange of label toward equilibrium is on the order of seconds). Comparison of specific activities of glutamate and ammonia suggests that at 5 s most labeled glutamate was mitochondrial, whereas at 60 s approximately 93% was cytosolic; this change is presumably brought about by the combined action of the mitochondrial and cytosolic aspartate aminotransferases and the aspartate carrier of the malate-aspartate shuttle. Specific activity measurements of glutamate, alanine, and aspartate are in accord with the proposal by Williamson et al. (Williamson, D.H., Lopes-Vieira, O., and Walker, B. (1967) Biochem. J. 104, 497-502) that the components of the aspartate aminotransferase reaction are in thermodynamic equilibrium, whereas the components of the alanine aminotransferase reaction are in equilibrium but compartmented in the rat liver. Despite considerable label in citrulline at early time points, no radioactivity (less than or equal to 0.25% of the total) was detected in carbamyl phosphate, suggesting very efficient conversion to citrulline with little free carbamyl phosphate accumulating in the mitochondria. Our data also show that some portal vein-derived ammonia is metabolized to glutamine in the rat liver, but the amount is small (approximately 7% of that metabolized to urea) in part because liver glutamine synthetase is located in a small population of perivenous cells "downstream" from the urea cycle-containing periportal cells. Finally, no tracer evidence could be found for the participation of the purine nucleotide cycle in ammonia production from aspartate. The present work continues to emphasize the usefulness of [13N]ammonia for short-term metabolic studies under truly tracer conditions, particularly when turnover times are on the order of seconds.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]