4.6 Article

Lactating Porcine Mammary Tissue Catabolizes Branched-Chain Amino Acids for Glutamine and Aspartate Synthesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 139, Issue 8, Pages 1502-1509

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3945/jn.109.105957

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. USDA Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service [2008-35206-18764]
  2. Texas AgriLife Research [H-8200]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The uptake of branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) from plasma by lactating porcine mammary gland substantially exceeds their output in milk, whereas glutamine output is 125% greater than its uptake from plasma, In this study, we tested the hypothesis that BCAA are catabolized for glutamine synthesis in mammary tissue. Mammary tissue slices from sows on d 28 of lactation were incubated at 37 degrees C for 1 h in Krebs buffer containing 0.5 or 2 mmol/L L-[1-C-14]- or L-[U-C-14]-labeled leucine, isoleucine, or valine. Rates of BCAA transport and degradation in mammary tissue were high, with similar to 60% of transaminated BCAA undergoing oxidative decarboxylation and the remainder being released as branched-chain alpha-ketoacids (BCKA). Most (similar to 70%) of the decarboxylated BCAA were oxidized to CO2. Rates of net BCAA transamination were similar to rates of glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, asparagine, and alanine synthesis. Consistent with the metabolic data, mammary tissue expressed BCAA aminotransferase (BCAT), BCKA decarboxylase, glutamine synthetase (GS), glutamate-oxaloacetate aminotransf erase, glutamate-pyruvate aminotransf erase, and asparagine synthetase, but no phosphate-activated glutaminase, activity. Western blot analysis indicated relatively high levels of mitochondrial and cytosolic isoforms of BCAT, as well as BCKA dehydrogenase and GS proteins in mammary tissue. Our results demonstrate that glutamine and aspartate (abundant amino acids in milk protein) were the major nitrogenous products of BCAA catabolism in lactating porcine mammary tissue and provide a biochemical basis to explain an enrichment of glutamine and aspartate in sow milk. J. Nutr. 139: 1502-1509, 2009.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available