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    Characteristics of glutamine metabolism in human precision-cut kidney slices: a (13)C-NMR study

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    The metabolism of glutamine, a physiological substrate of the human kidney, plays a major role in systemic acid–base homoeostasis. Not only because of the limited availability of human renal tissue but also in part due to the lack of adequate cellular models, the mechanisms regulating the renal metabolism of this amino acid in humans have been poorly characterized. Therefore given the renewed interest in their use, human precision-cut renal cortical slices were incubated in Krebs–Henseleit medium (118 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCl, 1.18 mM KH(2)PO(4), 1.18 mM MgSO(4)·7H(2)O, 24.9 mM NaHCO(3) and 2.5 mM CaCl(2)·2H(2)O) with 2 mM unlabelled or (13)C-labelled glutamine residues. After incubation, substrate utilization and product formation were measured by enzymatic and NMR spectroscopic methods. Glutamate accumulation tended to plateau but glutamine removal and ammonia, alanine and lactate production as well as flux through GLDH (glutamate dehydrogenase) increased to various extents with time for up to 4 h of incubation indicating the metabolic viability of the slices. Valproate, a stimulator of renal glutamine metabolism, markedly and in a dose-dependent fashion increased ammonia production. With [3-(13)C]glutamine as a substrate, and in the absence and presence of valproate, [(13)C]glutamate, [(13)C]alanine and [(13)C]lactate accounted for 81 and 96%, 34 and 63%, 30 and 46% of the glutamate, alanine and lactate accumulations measured enzymatically respectively. The slices also metabolized glutamine and retained their reactivity to valproate during incubations lasting for up to 48 h. These results demonstrate that, although endogenous metabolism substantially operates in the presence of glutamine, human precision-cut renal cortical slices are metabolically viable and strongly respond to the ammoniagenic effect of valproate. Thus, this experimental model is suitable for metabolic and pharmaco-toxicological studies
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