Comparison of leucine, serine and glycine transport across the ovine placenta

To estimate the transport rate of maternal glycine across the placenta [1- 13C]glycine and L-[1- 13]serine were infused intravenously in pregnant sheep using both continuous and bolus infusions. Each tracer was infused together with L-[1- 13C]leucine, to enable a comparison with the placental transp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Placenta (Eastbourne) 1996-11, Vol.17 (8), p.619-627
Hauptverfasser: Geddie, G., Moores, R., Meschia, G., Fennessey, P., Wilkening, R., Battaglia, F.C.
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container_end_page 627
container_issue 8
container_start_page 619
container_title Placenta (Eastbourne)
container_volume 17
creator Geddie, G.
Moores, R.
Meschia, G.
Fennessey, P.
Wilkening, R.
Battaglia, F.C.
description To estimate the transport rate of maternal glycine across the placenta [1- 13C]glycine and L-[1- 13]serine were infused intravenously in pregnant sheep using both continuous and bolus infusions. Each tracer was infused together with L-[1- 13C]leucine, to enable a comparison with the placental transport of an essential amino acid. At steady state, fetal plasma leucine enrichment was 40 per cent of maternal enrichment, indicating that approximately 60 per cent of the entry rate of leucine into fetal plasma is derived from protein breakdown in the placenta and fetus. Fetal plasma glycine enrichment was 11 per cent of maternal and there was no detectable fetal serine enrichment. The direct flux of maternal leucine into the fetal circulation was approximately 3.0 (bolus experiments) to 3.6 (continuous infusion experiments) pmol/min (kg fetus) and greater than the estimated 1.4 μmol/min (kg fetus) direct flux of maternal glycine, despite the fact that the net umbilical uptake of glycine exceeds that of leucine. This supports the conclusion that placental glycine production is a quantitatively important contribution to fetal glycine uptake via the umbilical circulation. The fetal glycine supply from the placenta is provided by a relatively small direct maternal glycine transplacental flux and a larger contribution derived from serine utilization within the placenta for glycine production.
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source MEDLINE; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Animals
Biological and medical sciences
Biological Transport
Blood Flow Velocity
Female
Fetal Blood - metabolism
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Glycine - administration & dosage
Glycine - blood
Kinetics
Leucine - administration & dosage
Leucine - blood
Maternal-Fetal Exchange
Mother. Fetoplacental unit. Mammary gland. Milk
Placenta - metabolism
Pregnancy
Pregnancy. Parturition. Lactation
Serine - administration & dosage
Serine - blood
Sheep
Umbilical Arteries
Umbilical Veins
Uterus - blood supply
Vertebrates: reproduction
title Comparison of leucine, serine and glycine transport across the ovine placenta
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