A white Bengal tiger was determined to have a central retinal lesion and a central visual defect. Because of the known association between feline central retinal degeneration (CRD) and taurine deficiency in domestic cats, plasma concentrations of taurine were measured in this tiger. Serum concentrations of taurine, methionine, and cystine also were measured in white Bengal tigers, orange Bengal tigers, taurine-sufficient domestic cats, and taurine-deprived and tissue-taurine-depleted visually impaired cats with CRD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA recent development in the preparation for amino acid analysis is the use of phenylisothiocyanate (PITC) as a precolumn derivatizing agent prior to analysis to form a stable derivative. These derivatives can then be separated by reversed phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). Because of interest in the accurate measurement of urinary hydroxyproline (HYP), PITC was used for derivatization followed by HPLC analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTaurine is the major free intracellular amino acid. It has become the focus of study by many as a conjugator of bile and as a neurotransmitter and intracellular messenger. In this report we document a technique for measuring taurine in physiologic samples which is rapid, reproducible, and accurate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study focuses on the maturation of the renal beta-amino acid transport system and uses dietary manipulation as a probe. The epithelial surface of the renal proximal tubule is responsible for the conservation of ions and organic solutes including beta-amino acids. This beta-amino acid transport system is stimulated during periods of reduced dietary intake and permits increased excretion following dietary excess.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examines the effect of a low sulfur amino acid diet (LTD) and a high taurine diet (HTD), compared with a normal diet, on the plasma, urine, muscle, brain and renal cortex levels of taurine in immature and adult rats. Milk taurine from lactating dams reflected the taurine content of the diet, being low in LTD-fed and high in HTD-fed animals. Nursing pups (7, 14 and 21 d old) often had plasma, urine and tissue--renal cortex, heart, skeletal muscle--levels of taurine related to dietary exposure, a situation also found in adult animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlterations in the intake of sulfur amino acids (SAA) changes the rat renal brush-border membrane uptake of the beta-amino acid, taurine. A low-SAA diet enhances and a high-taurine diet reduces uptake (Chesney et al., Kidney Int.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Neurol Sci
November 1984
Free amino acid levels and zinc, magnesium and calcium content have been determined in autopsy samples of 9 areas of the brain, two skeletal muscles, and the right ventricle, left ventricle and septum of the heart of a Friedreich's ataxia subject.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe subcellular distribution of amino acids was compared in brains of genetically seizure-susceptible (SS) and genetically seizure-resistant (SR) rats. The total taurine content (mumol/brain) in the P2B, or synaptosomal, fraction in SS rats was only 37% of that of SR rats. Glutamate, glutamine, glycine, alanine, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) contents were unaltered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have examined the correlation between the presence of epilepsy in humans, and plasma amino acid levels. Subjects were divided into those having pure generalized tonic-clonic seizures (grand mal group), those having generalized tonic-clonic seizures plus other types of epilepsy (mixed group), and those suffering from epilepsies other than grand mal (no grand mal group). Compared to non-epileptic controls, the grand mal group had significantly higher fasting plasma levels of aspartate (100% increase) and glutamate (380% increase) but significant decreases were seen with phenylalanine (?23%), lysine (?27%), and tryptophan (?30%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relative contributions have been determined of taurine derived from the mother in utero, via milk during nursing, and from endogenous biosynthesis to the total taurine content of the rat pup between birth and weaning. At birth, 32% of the taurine in the pup has been biosynthesized, and this proportion rises to 83% by day 20 of life. At birth, 67% has been derived from the mother in utero, and by day 20 this has fallen to 4% of the total.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe quantitative importance of diet versus biosynthesis as sources of taurine has been established in mice receiving dietary levels of 0.062% [3H]taurine and 0.74% [35S]methionine as sole sulfur-containing amino acids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug Nutr Interact
November 1984
The relative contribution of diet and biosynthesis to the taurine content of the rat has been determined quantitatively under various dietary conditions. Rats were maintained on diets containing [3H]taurine and/or [35S]methionine of known amounts and specific activities, and subsequently the specific activity of taurine in various tissues was determined. This approach gives a quantitative measure of how much taurine is biosynthesized versus how much is derived from the diet regardless of the biosynthetic route or site of biosynthesis in the animal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Pathol
February 1975
The effects on pig skin from radiations producing different densities of ionization have been determined. For the qualities of radiation employed, erythema was produced at a dose range from 1,240 to 3,440 rads and ulceration at 1,250 to 5,000 rads. In no instance did a radiation-induced neoplasm develop.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNine separate very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) experiments, carried out in 1972 and 1973 with radio telescopes 3900 kilometers apart, yielded values for the baseline length with a root-mean-square deviation about the mean of less than 20 centitneters. The corresponding fractional spread is about five parts in 10(8). Changes in universal time and in polar motion were also detertnined accurately from these data; the root-mean-square scatter of these results with respect to those based on optical methods were 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Radiol Ther Phys Biol
October 1974