Diabetes is known to produce increased levels of the branched chain amino acids in plasma, heart and muscle as well as increased oxidation of [14C]-leucine by nerves and muscles from rats. Plasma and retinas from streptozotocin diabetic rats had significant elevations in branched chain amino acid levels compared to control. Retinas from diabetic rats have been found to oxidize significantly more of the branched chain amino acids, leucine, isoleucine and valine than did control retinas when incubated in media containing 16.5 mmol/1 glucose. Neither the extracellular space nor the tissue pool of leucine was significantly different in the two groups. The addition of 19 amino acids, at normal plasma concentrations, to the incubation media resulted in 80 percent suppression of leucine oxidation without significant change in incorporation of [14C] into protein. These results suggest that the major role for the branched chain amino acids in the rat retina is in protein synthesis which is not affected by short-term diabetes. © 1978 Springer-Verlag.
CITATION STYLE
Frayser, R., & Buse, M. G. (1978). Branched chain amino acid metabolism in the retina of diabetic rats. Diabetologia, 14(3), 171–176. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00429777
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