Comparative metabolism and taurine-depleting effects of guanidinoethanesulfonate in cats, mice, and guinea pigs

Guanidinoethanesulfonate (GES) is a competitive inhibitor of taurine transport. The ability of GES to deplete taurine content has been compared in three species representing omnivores, carnivores, and herbivores. Rats and mice given drinking water containing 1% GES showed large decreases in taurine...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 1981-09, Vol.210 (2), p.698-709
Hauptverfasser: Huxtable, Ryan J., Lippincott, Shirley E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Guanidinoethanesulfonate (GES) is a competitive inhibitor of taurine transport. The ability of GES to deplete taurine content has been compared in three species representing omnivores, carnivores, and herbivores. Rats and mice given drinking water containing 1% GES showed large decreases in taurine concentration in all examined organs within a few days. These species do not metabolize GES. The substance was without effect on guinea pigs, a species that does not depend on diet for taurine, even after 20 days of treatment. However, guinea pigs metabolize a fraction of the GES administered to taurine. Cats responded to GES by increasing their urinary excretion of taurine 10-fold, while simultaneously maintaining normal concentrations in body organs. [1,2- 3H]GES given orally to cats was extensively metabolized to radioactive taurine. It therefore appears that the cat and to a lesser extent, the guinea pig, have transamidinase or amidinohydrolase activity for which GES is a substrate. However, this substance rapidly depletes taurine levels in the omnivores studied, and promises to be useful in further investigations on taurine in these species.
ISSN:0003-9861
1096-0384
DOI:10.1016/0003-9861(81)90237-X