Affiliation:
1. Department of Animal Science, Texas A & M University, CollegeStation 77843-2471, USA.
Abstract
Arginine is deficient in porcine colostrum and milk, and yet the piglet has a particularly high requirement for this essential amino acid for rapid postnatal growth. To explain this paradox, arginine synthesis was quantified in enterocytes from newborn (0-day-old) and 2- to 7-day-old suckling pigs. Arginine was found to be synthesized from glutamine in 0- to 7-day-old pig enterocytes, but the rates of arginine synthesis were three- to fourfold greater in 0- to 2-day-old pigs than in 7-day-old pigs. To elucidate the developmental change of the intestinal arginine synthesis, the metabolism of glutamine to citrulline, the conversion of citrulline to arginine, and the activities of the enzymes involved were measured. The rates of metabolism of glutamine to citrulline were 2.5- to 3.5-fold greater in enterocytes from 0- to 2-day-old pigs than in cells from 7-day-old pigs, as were the rates of conversion of citrulline to arginine. The activities of all enzymes that synthesize arginine from glutamine, except pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase and argininosuccinate lyase (ASL), increased in enterocytes from 2-day-old pigs compared with 0-day-old pigs. The activities of all these enzymes decreased by approximately 75% in 7-day-old pigs compared with 2-day-old pigs. Arginase activity was negligible in enterocytes from 0- to 7-day-old pigs, thus minimizing intestinal hydrolysis of newly synthesized arginine and maximizing the endogenous provision of arginine. The results of this study demonstrate the presence of arginine-synthesizing enzymes and their developmental changes in postnatal pig enterocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
126 articles.
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