Objective: Ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate (OKG) displays anabolic properties at the hepatic level, but the mechanisms involved remain unclear. This study investigated in vivo the ability of OKG to modulate hepatic gene expression of three liver-secreted proteins: albumin, transthyretin, and retinol binding protein.
Methods: One hundred eighty rats were fed for 5 d with a balanced regimen enriched with OKG (5 g.
In systemic or localized acute inflammation, liver ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and protein contents increase. We first determined whether changes in RNA, more specifically rRNA, and protein breakdown rates were involved in the accumulation of both types of macromolecules 24 h after induction of endotoxemia. Liver RNA and protein contents were enhanced by 35 and 19%, respectively, in the endotoxemic rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective And Design: To determine whether the inhibition of RNA breakdown observed in ad libitum fed rats 24 h after turpentine administration still occurs in inflamed rats fasted for 24 h and to examine the mechanism and factors involved.
Methods: RNA breakdown was measured during cyclic in situ perfusion of livers by the accumulation of [14C] cytidine after in vivo RNA labelling. Autophagic activity was determined by the morphometric analysis of lysosomal structures.
Liver RNA- and protein-degradation rates were measured after the induction of acute inflammation in the rat. A preliminary study determined changes in hepatic RNA and protein content 12, 18 and 24 h after a turpentine oil injection. The RNA content in turpentine-treated rats compared with pair-fed animals increased significantly and sharply from 12 h (+ 11%) to 18 h (+ 32%) and slightly thereafter (+ 37% at 24 h).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiver RNA and protein breakdown rates were measured simultaneously in fed and in 24 h-fasted rats during a short-term cyclic perfusion, 1 h after an intraperitoneal injection of glucagon or of saline. RNA was labelled in vivo by an intraperitoneal injection of [6-14C]orotic acid, 60 h before the start of the perfusion. The accumulation of radioactive cytidine and valine in the perfusion medium for 15 min was used to determine RNA breakdown and proteolysis respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Trace Elem Res
July 1993
Plasma zinc, copper, and parameters of growth were measured in a group of 116 French preschool children, 2-5 yr-old from low-income households. Participants were selected on the basis of Z-scores of weight for height (WHZ) and height for age (HAZ). Zinc and copper concentrations of children with growth impairment (GI), defined by a WHZ and/or HAZ < -1 Z-score, were compared to those of age, sex, and ethnic origin matched controls (WHZ and HAZ > -1 Z-score).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemical markers of nutritional status (albumin, transthyretin, insulin-like growth factor-I and zinc) were measured in slowly growing two- to five-year-old, low-income Parisian children whose weight-for-height or height-for-age z scores (WHZ or HAZ) were between -1 and -2 SD of the NCHS median. The results were compared to controls who were matched for age, sex, and ethnic origin with WHZ and HAZ between -1 and +2 SD. Mean serum levels of transthyretin, albumin and insulin-like growth factor-I and mean plasma zinc concentrations were significantly lower in the growth-impaired children than in the controls (p = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlasma selenium (Se) concentration and erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase activity (GPx) were assessed in a population of healthy preschool children two to five years old, residing in the city of Paris. In the 118 subjects, mean (+/- SD) plasma Se concentration was 62.10 +/- 13.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Endocrinol (Copenh)
November 1992
Thyroxine-binding globulin, the highest affinity thyroid hormone binder of rat serum, was studied during 28 days of dietary protein restriction (6% protein vs 18% protein in isocaloric control diet) or energy restriction (60% intake of control diet). Studies were performed on male rats aged four weeks at the beginning of experiments: the animals had reached the ontogenic stage when the thyroxine-binding globulin had declined, after its high postnatal surge, to undetectable levels. Short-term administration (seven days) of one or the other restricted diet similarly induced resynthesis of the protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe potential use of thymulin levels as a sensitive and functional marker of energy deficiency was investigated in 13 obese women during a 3-week very-low-calorie diet. Mean weight loss was 8.92 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study was designed to determine whether the decrease in serum transthyretin that occurs during food restriction results from gross energy reduction or from depressed protein or lipid intake and to examine the relationship between serum transthyretin and hepatic transthyretin mRNA during moderate protein or food deficiency. Groups of young rats were allowed free access to either a 18% (control) or a 6% protein diet (protein-restricted), or reduced intakes. The food-restricted groups received 60% of control intake from the control diet, a 40% protein-enriched diet, or a 40% lipid-enriched diet, for 28 d.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo test apolipoprotein sensitivity as protein deficiency markers, concomitant evolution of plasma apolipoproteins (apo) and usual nutritional markers (transthyretin, albumin, transferrin) were followed during a 28-d protein restriction in young male Wistar rats. In addition, plasma lipids and chemical composition of lipoproteins were assayed by d 28. The control and the deficient groups were fed 18% and 6% casein diets, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause transthyretin (TTR) is a tryptophan-rich molecule and a sensitive nutritional marker, tryptophan deficiency might markedly influence the circulating level of TTR. The effect of severe tryptophan (Trp) deficiency on serum TTR, as well as on albumin and transferrin levels, was studied in growing rats for 8 d. The animals were then refed a control diet for 12 d.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe influence of a wide range of protein and/or energy intakes on the serum level of rat transthyretin was studied. Young and adult rats were fed ad libitum diets containing 18, 9, 6, 4 and 0.5% protein (wt/wt) or were fed a control diet in restricted amounts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo gain some insight into the nutritional factors that affect the blood level of transthyretin (TTR) and its metabolism, we have investigated the response of rat TTR to 1, 2 and 3 d of fasting and to 24 h of fasting followed by refeeding. The observed changes were compared to the level of TTR in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and to the amount of circulating thyroid hormones. Dot hybridization of a hepatic mRNA-cDNA probe specific for TTR was used to measure the relative level of TTR mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe combined effects of protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) and infection on thymic function evaluated by specific plasma thymulin activity were studied in Senegalese children: 29 hospitalized in Dakar for severe malnutrition and various diseases; 9 infected without sign of severe PEM, living in Dakar; 13 apparently healthy, uninfected, living in Dakar; and 7 apparently healthy, uninfected, living in Paris. Most of the free-living children in Dakar suffered from mild to moderate PEM. The specific thymulin activity (total plasma activity minus the activity recorded after adsorption of the plasma with a monoclonal antithymulin antibody) was almost undetectable in the infected children and was normal only in the children living in Paris.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Vitam Nutr Res
January 1988
The liver is the main storage site of vitamin A and copper. Inverse relationships between copper and vitamin A liver concentrations have been suggested. We have investigated the consequences of a copper-deficient diet on liver and blood vitamin A storage in Wistar rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVariations in plasma thyroxine-binding prealbumin (TBPA) were investigated in 15 well-nourished patients who underwent minor orthopaedic surgery and resumed normal oral feeding on the first post-operative day. TBPA fluctuations were analysed together with those of other nutritional and inflammatory markers including albumin (ALB), some acute-phase reactant proteins, C-reactive protein (CRP), orosomucoid also named alpha 1-acid-glycoprotein (alpha 1GP), alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1AT) as well as cortisol and haematocrit. Measurements were conducted the day before operation, after the administration of anaesthesia, 2 h after the patient regained consciousness and then daily for a period of one week (days 1 to 7).
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