These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Noradrenaline-induced stimulation of glutamine metabolism in primary cultures of astrocytes.
    Author: Huang R, Hertz L.
    Journal: J Neurosci Res; 1995 Aug 01; 41(5):677-83. PubMed ID: 7563248.
    Abstract:
    Effects of noradrenaline and of adrenergic subtype specific agonists on the uptake and metabolism of [14C]glutamine and [14C]glutamate in primary cultures of mouse astrocytes have been investigated. The total uptake of radioactivity from extracellular [14C]glutamine into the cells was enhanced during exposure to 100 microM noradrenaline, isoproterenol, or clonidine. This is partly due to an increased radioactivity in the glutamine pool and partly due to an increased formation of labeled glutamate from glutamine, which had become very marked (66%) after 240 min of incubation. The CO2 formation from labeled glutamine during 4 hr of incubation was enhanced about twofold in the presence of noradrenaline. Ten millimolar amino oxyacetic acid (AOAA), a transamination inhibitor, had no effect on CO2 formation from glutamine, indicating that the formation of alpha-ketoglutarate from glutamate occurs as an oxidative deamination. The stimulation of 14CO2 production from labeled glutamine was at least as large when glucose was deleted from medium, suggesting that the increased 14CO2 formation represents a stimulation of glutamine metabolism as such and is not only a reflection of an increase in oxidative metabolism of glucose and a bidirectional exchange between alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate. The opposite process, incorporation of radioactivity from labeled glutamate into glutamine, was not enhanced in the presence of noradrenaline. The findings suggest that noradrenaline stimulates the rates of glutamine uptake, glutamate synthesis, and CO2 production from glutamine and thus increases energy supply to astrocytes but has no effect on the opposite reaction, i.e., glutamine formation from glutamate, a reaction of importance for neuronal-astrocyte interations.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]