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Glitazones regulate glutamine metabolism by inducing a cellular acidosis in MDCK cells
18
Citations
37
References
2002
Year
We studied the effect of the antihyperglycemic glitazones, ciglitazone, troglitazone, and rosiglitazone, on glutamine metabolism in renal tubule-derived Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. Troglitazone (25 microM) enhanced glucose uptake and lactate production by 108 and 92% (both P < 0.001). Glutamine utilization was not inhibited, but alanine formation decreased and ammonium formation increased (both P < 0.005). The decrease in net alanine formation occurred with a change in alanine aminotransferase (ALT) reactants, from close to equilibrium to away from equilibrium, consistent with inhibition of ALT activity. A shift of glutamine's amino nitrogen from alanine into ammonium was confirmed by using L-[2-(15)N]glutamine and measuring the [(15)N]alanine and [(15)N]ammonium production. The glitazone-induced shift from alanine to ammonium in glutamate metabolism was dose dependent, with troglitazone being twofold more potent than rosiglitazone and ciglitazone. All three glitazones induced a spontaneous cellular acidosis, reflecting impaired acid extrusion in responding to both an exogenous (NH) and an endogenous (lactic acid) load. Our findings are consistent with glitazones inducing a spontaneous cellular acidosis associated with a shift in glutamine amino nitrogen metabolism from predominantly anabolic into a catabolic pathway.
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