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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Renal metabolic response to acid-base changes: II. The early effects of metabolic acidosis on renal metabolism in the rat

George Alleyne
- 01 May 1970 - 
- Vol. 49, Iss: 5, pp 943-951
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TLDR
The data indicate that increased gluconeogenesis is an early response to metabolic acidosis and will facilitate ammonia production by utilization of glutamate which inhibits the glutaminase I enzyme.
Abstract
The early renal metabolic response was studied in rats made acidotic by oral feeding of ammonium chloride. 2 hr after feeding of ammonium chloride there was already significant acidosis. Urinary ammonia also increased after ammonium chloride ingestion and at 1(1/2) hr was significantly elevated. In vitro gluconeogenesis by renal cortical slices was increased at 2 hr and thereafter increased steadily. Ammonia production by the same slices was also increased at 2 hr, but thereafter fell and at 6 hr had decreased to levels which, although higher than those of the control, were lower than those obtained from the rats acidotic for only 2 hr. There was no correlation between in vitro gluconeogenesis and ammonia production by kidney slices from rats during the first 6 hr of acidosis, but after 48 hr of ammonium chloride feeding, these two processes were significantly correlated. The early increase in renal gluconeogenesis was demonstrable with both glutamine and succinate as substrates. The activity of the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was increased after 4-6 hr of acidosis. During this time there was a decrease in renal RNA synthesis as shown by decreased uptake of orotic acid-(5)H into RNA. Metabolic intermediates were also measured in quick-frozen kidneys at varying times after induction of acidosis. There was an immediate rise in aspartate and a fall in alpha-ketoglutarate and malate levels. There was never any difference in pyruvate or lactate levels or lactate:pyruvate ratios between control and acidotic rats. Phosphoenolpyruvate rose significantly after 6 hr of acidosis. All the data indicate that increased gluconeogenesis is an early response to metabolic acidosis and will facilitate ammonia production by utilization of glutamate which inhibits the glutaminase I enzyme. The pattern of change in metabolic intermediates can also be interpreted as showing that there is not only enhanced gluconeogenesis, but also that there may be significant increase of activity of glutaminase II as part of the very early response to metabolic acidosis.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Distribution of Glutaminase Isoenzymes in the Various Structures of the Nephron in Normal, Acidotic, and Alkalotic Rat Kidney

TL;DR: Only the phosphate-dependent glutaminase activity responds to metabolic acidosis or alkalosis and this response appears to be limited to the proximal convoluted tubules, whereas after administration of NH4Cl for 7 days to induce acidosis the activity increased 20-fold, whereas 7 days of NaHCO3 administration to induce alkAlosis caused a 40% decrease.
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Metabolic consequences of acid-base disorders

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Significance of blood lactate levels in critically III patients with liver disease

TL;DR: Lactic acidosis in critically ill patients with liver disease is associated with clinical evidence of shock and with increased hospital mortality, and its association with clinical indicators of circulatory shock as well as hospital mortality was examined.
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The regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) synthesis in rat kidney cortex. The role of acid-base balance and glucocorticoids.

TL;DR: The stimulation of P-enolpyruvate carboxykinase synthesis is the major mechanism for the increase in the level of the enzyme observed in metabolic acidosis.
References
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The Redox State of Free Nicotinamide-Adenine Dinucleotide in the Cytoplasm and Mitochondria of Rat Liver

TL;DR: The bearing of these findings on various problems, including the number of NAD(+)-NADH pools in liver cells; the applicability of the method to tissues other than liver; the transhydrogenase activity of glutamate dehydrogenase; the physiological significance of the difference of the redox states of mitochondria and cytoplasm; aspects of the regulation of theredox state of cell compartments; the steady-state concentration of mitochondrial oxaloacetate.
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The determination of ammonia in whole blood by a direct colorimetric method

TL;DR: The determination of ammonia by the indophenol reaction, when carried out on a deproteinised tungstate-sulphuric acid extract of whole blood, is simple, rapid and specific and is suitable for serial determinations since storage is possible.
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