1. Amino acid metabolism and protein synthesis in lactating rats fed on a liquid diet.
- Author
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Barber T, García de la Asunción J, Puertes IR, and Viña JR
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Transport, Body Weight, Dietary Proteins metabolism, Eating, Glutamates metabolism, Jejunum metabolism, Liver metabolism, Mammary Glands, Animal metabolism, Muscles metabolism, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Urea metabolism, Amino Acids metabolism, Lactation, Nitrogen metabolism, Protein Biosynthesis
- Abstract
1. Amino acid metabolism was studied in control virgin rats, lactating rats and virgin rats protein-pair-fed with the lactating rats (high-protein virgin rats). 2. Urinary excretion of nitrogen and urea was higher in lactating than in control virgin rats, and in high-protein virgin rats it was higher than in lactating rats. 3. The activities of urea-cycle enzymes (units/g) were higher in high-protein virgin than in lactating rats, except for arginase. In lactating rats the activities of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase and argininosuccinate synthase were lower than in control virgin rats. When the liver size is considered, the activities in lactating rats were similar to those in high-protein virgin rats, except for arginase. 4. N-Acetylglutamate content was higher in high-protein virgin rats than in the other two groups. 5. The rate of urea synthesis from precursors by isolated hepatocytes was higher in high-protein virgin rats than in the other two groups. 6. The flooding-dose method (L-[4-3H]phenylalanine) for measuring protein synthesis was used. The absolute synthesis rates of mammary gland, liver and small-intestinal mucosa were higher in lactating rats than in the other two groups, and in high-protein virgin rats than in control virgin rats 7. These results show that the increased needs for amino acids during lactation are met by hyperphagia and by a nitrogen-sparing mechanism.
- Published
- 1990
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