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Journal ArticleDOI

Blood–Brain Barrier Transport of Kynurenines: Implications for Brain Synthesis and Metabolism

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TLDR
The results demonstrate the saturable transfer of L‐KYN across the blood–brain barrier and suggest that circulating L‐ KYN, 3‐HKYN, and ANA may each contribute significantly to respective cerebral pools under normal conditions.
Abstract
To evaluate the potential contribution of circulating kynurenines to brain kynurenine pools, the rates of cerebral uptake and mechanisms of blood-brain barrier transport were determined for several kynurenine metabolites of tryptophan, including L-kynurenine (L-KYN), 3-hydroxykynurenine (3-HKYN), 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid (3-HANA), anthranilic acid (ANA), kynurenic acid (KYNA), and quinolinic acid (QUIN), in pentobarbital-anesthetized rats using an in situ brain perfusion technique. L-KYN was found to be taken up into brain at a significant rate [permeability-surface area product (PA) = 2-3 x 10(-3) ml/s/g] by the large neutral amino acid carrier (L-system) of the blood-brain barrier. Best-fit estimates of the Vmax and Km of saturable L-KYN transfer equalled 4.5 x 10(-4) mumol/s/g and 0.16 mumol/ml, respectively. The same carrier may also mediate the brain uptake of 3-HKYN as D,L-3-HKYN competitively inhibited the brain transfer of the large neutral amino acid L-leucine. For the other metabolites, uptake appeared mediated by passive diffusion. This occurred at a significant rate for ANA (PA, 0.7-1.6 x 10(-3) ml/s/g), and at far lower rates (PA, 2-7 x 10(-5) ml/s/g) for 3-HANA, KYNA, and QUIN. Transfer for KYNA, 3-HANA, and ANA also appeared to be limited by plasma protein binding. The results demonstrate the saturable transfer of L-KYN across the blood-brain barrier and suggest that circulating L-KYN, 3-HKYN, and ANA may each contribute significantly to respective cerebral pools. In contrast, QUIN, KYNA, and 3-HANA cross the blood-brain barrier poorly, and therefore are not expected to contribute significantly to brain pools under normal conditions.

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Gut-Brain Axis in the Early Postnatal Years of Life: A Developmental Perspective.

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of major developmental events in the GI tract and brain in the early postnatal period and their parallel developmental trajectories under physiological conditions and presents hypotheses on the role of the GBA mediators in response to the parallel development of theGI tract andbrain in infants.
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Model of tryptophan metabolism, readily scalable using tissue-specific gene expression data.

TL;DR: A comprehensive kinetic model of the complex network of human tryptophan metabolism based upon existing kinetic data for all enzymatic conversions and transporters is presented and it is concluded that the combination of the kinetic model with expression data represents a powerful diagnostic tool to predict alterations in tryptophile metabolism.
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Inflammation-Induced Catabolism of Tryptophan and Tyrosine in Acute Ischemic Stroke

TL;DR: The findings indicate that the proinflammatory response in acute ischemic stroke may be responsible for a reduced capacity for the biosynthesis of brain catecholamines and mediate neurotoxic effects, while the anti-inflammatory IL-10 may exert a neuroprotective effect and prevent the putative reducedcapacity for 5-hydroxytryptamine synthesis in the brain.
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Effect of maternal immune activation on the kynurenine pathway in preadolescent rat offspring and on MK801-induced hyperlocomotion in adulthood: Amelioration by COX-2 inhibition

TL;DR: The blood kynurenine pathway is revealed as a potential mechanism by which MIA interferes with postnatal brain maturation and associated behavioural disturbances and emphasises the preventative potential of inflammation targeting drugs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quinolinic acid: an endogenous metabolite that produces axon-sparing lesions in rat brain

TL;DR: Intracerebral injection of the neuroexcitatory tryptophan metabolite, quinolinic acid, has behavioral, neurochemical and neuropathological consequences reminiscent of those of exogenous excitotoxins, such as kainic and ibotenic acids.
Journal ArticleDOI

Amino acid assignment to one of three blood-brain barrier amino acid carriers

TL;DR: Affinity for a basic amino acid carrier system was demonstrated for arginine, ornithine, and lysine and a third, low-capacity independent carrier system transporting aspartic and glutamic acids was demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

An in situ brain perfusion technique to study cerebrovascular transport in the rat

TL;DR: The in situ brain perfusion technique is a sensitive new method to study cerebrovascular transfer in the rat and permits absolute control of perfusate composition.
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