Quantification of incorporation of [15N]ammonia into plasma amino acids and urea
B. W. Patterson, F. Carraro, S. Klein and R. R. Wolfe Department of Surgery, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, USA. The incorporation of 15N into individual plasma amino acids and urea was quantified in five human subjects who received 15NH4Cl either orally or intravenously for 6 h. Aft...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology: endocrinology and metabolism 1995-09, Vol.269 (3), p.E508-E515 |
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Zusammenfassung: | B. W. Patterson, F. Carraro, S. Klein and R. R. Wolfe
Department of Surgery, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, USA.
The incorporation of 15N into individual plasma amino acids and urea was
quantified in five human subjects who received 15NH4Cl either orally or
intravenously for 6 h. After oral tracer administration, the highest
enrichment was achieved by arginine, followed by urea and glutamine;
distribution of 15N within glutamine was 55% amide and 45% amino N.
Glutamine achieved the highest enrichment after the intravenous
administration of tracer, with a distribution of 92% amide and 8% amino N.
The relative distribution pattern of 15N incorporation was quantified from
the rate at which 15N initially appeared in each plasma component. Amino
acids (especially arginine, glutamine, and glutamate) accounted for greater
than one-half (54%) of the orally administered tracer that was initially
recovered in plasma components, compared with 46% initial appearance for
urea; for the intravenous tracer, amino acids accounted for 78% of initial
appearance of tracer compared with 22% for urea. Our results highlight the
involvement of the splanchnic bed in the utilization of orally administered
ammonia (preferential incorporation of oral tracer into arginine, urea,
glutamate, and the amino N of glutamine) in contrast to the preferential
incorporation of systemically administered ammonia into the amide N of
glutamine and alanine. |
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ISSN: | 0193-1849 0002-9513 1522-1555 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpendo.1995.269.3.e508 |