4.8 Article

Hyperammonemia in gene-targeted mice lacking functional hepatic glutamine synthetase

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1423968112

Keywords

hepatic encephalopathy; metabolic zonation; oxidative stress; RNA oxidation; glutamine

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [Sonderforschungsbereich (SFB) 575, SFB 974]
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation [SKA2010]
  3. Dusseldorf Graduate School of the Heinrich Heine University of Dusseldorf

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Urea cycle defects and acute or chronic liver failure are linked to systemic hyperammonemia and often result in cerebral dysfunction and encephalopathy. Although an important role of the liver in ammonia metabolism is widely accepted, the role of ammonia metabolizing pathways in the liver for maintenance of whole-body ammonia homeostasis in vivo remains ill-defined. Here, we show by generation of liver-specific Gln synthetase (GS)-deficient mice that GS in the liver is critically involved in systemic ammonia homeostasis in vivo. Hepatic deletion of GS triggered systemic hyperammonemia, which was associated with cerebral oxidative stress as indicated by increased levels of oxidized RNA and enhanced protein Tyr nitration. Liver-specific GS-deficient mice showed increased locomotion, impaired fear memory, and a slightly reduced life span. In conclusion, the present observations highlight the importance of hepatic GS for maintenance of ammonia homeostasis and establish the liver-specific GS KO mouse as a model with which to study effects of chronic hyperammonemia.

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