End products of glucose and glutamine metabolism by L929 cells
- PMID: 3611053
End products of glucose and glutamine metabolism by L929 cells
Abstract
Products of glucose and glutamine metabolism by L929 cells were detected and quantitated by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry of the oxime-trimethylsilyl derivatives. This method allowed detection and identification of all major carboxylic and amino acids produced in the system. Although lactic acid was expected to be the major product, alanine, citric, glutamic, aspartic, and pyruvic acids were also released into the culture medium at significant rates. Incorporation of labeled carbon from D-[U-13C]glucose showed that the alanine, lactic, and pyruvic acids were derived from glucose as was one-third of the citric acid carbon. The rate of glucose utilization for production of these end products was 29-fold greater than the rate of glucose oxidation to CO2, and calculated ATP production from alanine and pyruvate synthesis exceeded that from lactate synthesis by nearly 2-fold. Utilization of glutamine for synthesis of aspartic, glutamic, and citric acids also exceeded the rate of glutamine oxidation, thereby making end-product synthesis from glucose and glutamine the dominant cellular metabolic activity. In the absence of glucose, synthesis and intracellular levels of aspartic and glutamic acids increased, whereas synthesis and cell content of the other acids decreased markedly. This response is consistent with the metabolic pattern proposed by Moreadith and Lehninger (Moreadith, R.W., and Lehninger, A.L. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6215-6221) in which much of the glutamine used by these cells is converted to aspartate in the absence of a pyruvate source and to aspartate or citrate in the presence of pyruvate.
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