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Relationships between γ‐aminobutyrate and succinate cycles during and after cerebral ischemia
26
Citations
24
References
1982
Year
Normal ContentSocial SciencesCerebral Vascular RegulationBrain InjuryNeurologySuccinate CyclesNeurochemistryIschemic SyndromeCerebral IschemiaNeuroprotectionComplete Compression IschemiaCerebral Blood FlowNervous SystemReperfusion InjuryNeurophysiologyPhysiologyNeuroscienceComplete IschemiaMetabolismMedicine
Some metabolites (glycogen, glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, pyruvate, lactate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, fumarate, malate, glutamate, aspartate, gamma-aminobutyrate, glutamine, alanine, NH+4) were measured in rat cerebral cortex after 5 minutes of complete compression ischemia, as well as after 5, 15, or 30 minutes of recirculation following 5 minutes of ischemia. Complete ischemia induced a drop of glycolytic substrates and intermediates, consistent with the increase of lactate, succinate, alanine, and gamma-aminobutyrate, and with the decrease of malate, fumarate, and alpha-ketoglutarate. These events may be regarded as an expression of the activation of the gamma-aminobutyrate cycle and of the succinate cycle, where succinate itself, in the absence of O2, acts as a terminal electron acceptor. During post-ischemic recovery, cerebral parameters tended to normalize, except for the further increase of alanine and the still higher than normal content of both succinate and gamma-aminobutyrate, as an expression of the possible activation of the gamma-glutamyl and gamma-aminobutyrate cycles during recovery.
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