4.7 Article

Dossier:: Free amino acids in human health and pathologies -: I.: Arginine

Journal

BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY
Volume 56, Issue 9, Pages 439-445

Publisher

EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0753-3322(02)00284-6

Keywords

arginine; nitric oxide; INOS

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L-Arginine (Arg) is classified as an essential amino acid for birds, carnivores and young mammals and a conditionally essential amino acid for adults. It is converted by arginase to L-ornithine, a precursor of polyamines and urea, which is important in the urea cycle. Arg serves as a precursor for, creatine, which plays an essential role in the energy metabolism of muscle, nerve and testis and accounts for Arg catabolism and for the synthesis of agmatine and proteins. Via its ability to increase growth hormone secretion it influences immune function. Depending on nutritional status and developmental stage, normal plasma Arg concentrations in humans and animals range from 95 to 250 mumol/l. Systemic or oral Arg administration has been shown to improve cardiovascular function and reduce myocardial ischemia in coronary artery disease patients, It reduces blood pressure and renal vascular resistance in essential hypertensive patients with normal or insufficient renal function. Although Arg plasma concentrations are not altered in hypercholesterolemic individuals, oral or intravenous Arg administration can reverse endothelial dysfunction in hypercholesterolemic patients and in cigarette smokers. The main importance of Arg is attributed to its role as a precursor for the synthesis of nitric oxide (NO), a free radical molecule that is synthesized in all mammalian cells from L-Arg by NO synthase (NOS). NO appears to be a major form of the endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF). NO and EDRF share similar chemical and pharmacological properties and are derived from the oxidation of a terminal guanidine group of L-Arg. Various mechanisms have been implicated in the defect in vascular relaxation. These include, increased diffusional barrier for NO, L-Arg depletion, altered levels of reactive oxygen, inactivation of NO by superoxide anions (O-2(-)). The independent reactions of O-2(-), NO and their reaction yielding peroxynitrite are critical in the initiation and maintenance of the atherosclerotic state and contribute to the defect in vasorelaxation: NO also plays a role as a neurotransmitter, mediator of immune response and as signaling molecule. The NO synthesized by iNOS in macrophages contributes to their cytotoxic activity against tumor cells, bacteria and protozoa. Our aim here is to review on some amino acids with high functional priority such as Arg and to define their effective activity in human health and pathologies. (C) 2002 Editions scientifiques et medicales Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.

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