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[Nitrogen-economy and synthesis of serine and glycine in reticulocytes]

Authors :
M, Müller
S, Rapoport
J, Rathmann
R, Dumdey
Source :
Acta biologica et medica Germanica. 36(3-4)
Publication Year :
1977

Abstract

Amino acids constitute the main substrate of the reticulocyte. The amino acid pool of reticulocytes represents a characteristic selection. The composition of the amino acid pool is dependent on maturation. From the preferential oxidation of short-chain amino acids one would expect a ratio about of 5:1 between the oxygen consumption and ammonia formation. If one corrects for NH3-formation by the deamination of nucleotides the ratio between the oxygen consumption and NH3-formation is about an order of magnitude higher than the theoretical ratio. The small liberation of NH3 in energy production from amino acids results from the re-utilization of their alpha-NH2-group for the synthesis of serine and glycine, while the C-skeleton stems from glucose. Serine is formed via OH-pyruvate and OH-pyruvate. Serine and glycine serve preferentially for synthesis of hemoglobin. In reticulocytes there exists a compartmentation of glycine which accounts for differences between serine and glycine in isotopic experiments. From the time dependent change of the specific activities of pulse-labelled serine and glycine one may calculate that the serine synthesis amounts to 15--30% of the glucose utilization.

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
00015318
Volume :
36
Issue :
3-4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta biologica et medica Germanica
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........921529fea3eaac0468a8ee3e833ea4ea