Abstract
Although neonatal piglets can synthesize some arginine from proline, there is a limit to this synthesis, and piglets fed an arginine-deficient diet have diminished whole-body arginine status. To help elucidate where the limitation in arginine synthesis may occur, our objective was to determine the most effective arginine precursor in 1-wk-old enterally fed piglets. Piglets were administered either an arginine-deficient (basal) diet [1.15 mmol arginine/(kg·d)] or the basal diet supplemented with equimolar [9.18 mmol/(kg·d)] amounts of proline (+Pro), ornithine (+Orn), citrulline (+Cit) or arginine (+Arg) for 5 d (n = 5/diet). Daily blood samples were taken and indicators of whole-body arginine status including plasma amino acid, ammonia, and urea concentrations were measured. A primed, constant intragastric (i.g.) infusion of L-[U- 14C]proline was given to measure the proline to arginine conversion, and intravenous (i.v.) and i.g. infusions of L-[guanido-14C]arginine were given to determine arginine flux and to quantify the splanchnic extraction of dietary arginine. Piglets fed the +Cit and +Arg diets had lower plasma ammonia and urea concentrations (P < 0.05) and higher plasma arginine concentrations (P < 0.0001) and arginine fluxes (P < 0.05) than piglets fed the other 3 diets. Piglets fed +Cit and +Arg had a lower proline to arginine conversion (P < 0.05). During first-pass splanchnic metabolism, 52% of the dietary arginine was extracted, and this extraction was not affected by whole-body arginine status (P > 0.05). These data indicate that citrulline, but not ornithine or proline, is an effective arginine precursor, and that either citrulline formation or availability appears to limit arginine synthesis in neonatal piglets. © 2006 American Society for Nutrition.
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Urschel, K. L., Shoveller, A. K., Uwiera, R. R. E., Pencharz, P. B., & Ball, R. O. (2006). Citrulline is an effective arginine precursor in enterally fed neonatal piglets. Journal of Nutrition, 136(7), 1806–1813. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/136.7.1806
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