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Title: Regulation of glutamine metabolism in dog kidney in vivo. Author: Vinay P, Lemieux G, Gougoux A, Halperin M. Journal: Kidney Int; 1986 Jan; 29(1):68-79. PubMed ID: 3515016. Abstract: In summary, we propose: that renal ammoniagenesis is regulated both by factors dependent and independent of the acid-base status, the net effect of the ammoniagenic process on the proton balance being directly related to the rate of urinary ammonium excretion; that the renal metabolism of glutamine should not be examined independently of the metabolism of other substrate physiologically taken up by the kidney; that different pathways for glutamine metabolism will change during acid-base disorders of organic or nonorganic origin; that, among the main glutamine utilizing pathways, only the GLDH pathway is influenced directly by the acid-base status; the ammoniagenic transamination pathways is regulated by substrate availability in the kidney; that the lowest ammoniagenic flux in the kidney coincides with the rate of alanine production since alanine appears to derive directly from glutamine. When this pathway is stimulated without concomitant acidosis, most of the ammonia produced is not excreted in urine but released in the renal venous blood: thus, no significant effect on the acid-base balance is produced; that glutamine is metabolized by proximal kidney tubules of acidotic dogs probably through net oxidation; that the quantitative analysis of the metabolic consequence of this process indicates that the rate of ATP turnover at this site may effectively place an upper limit to the rate of glutamine oxidation, and ammonia production by the kidney, and that this limit is nearly reached in chronically acidotic animals.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]