Phenylacetylglutamine may replace urea as a vehicle for waste nitrogen excretion

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Abstract

Phenylacetylglutamine (PAG), the amino acid acetylation product of phenylacetate (or phenylbutyr-ate after /S-oxidation) was evaluated as a waste nitrogen product in patients with inborn errors of urea synthesis. A boy with carbamyl phosphate synthetase deficiency receiving a low nitrogen intake excreted 80-90% of administered phenylacetate or phenylbutyrate as PAG. The amount of PAG nitrogen excreted varied from 38-44% of his dietary nitrogen, similar to the relationship between urea nitrogen and dietary nitrogen found in normal subjects receiving low dietary nitrogen. With few exceptions, neither phenylacetate nor phenylbutyrate accumulated in plasma. Treatment with relatively high dose phenylacetate or phenylbutyrate (0.5-0.6 g/kg/d) resulted in normal daytime levels of glutaminę. These data suggest that PAG may replace urea as a waste nitrogen product when phenylbutyrate is administered at a dose that yields PAG nitrogen excretion equal to 40-44% of a low nitrogen intake. © 1991 International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.

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APA

Brusilow, S. W. (1991). Phenylacetylglutamine may replace urea as a vehicle for waste nitrogen excretion. Pediatric Research, 29(2), 147–150. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199102000-00009

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