Effect of food deprivation on glutathione and amino acid levels in brain and liver of young and aged rats.

Brain Res

Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Center for Neurochemistry, Orangeburg, NY 10962, USA.

Published: April 1995

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The effect of short-term food deprivation on glutathione (GSH) and amino acid levels in brain regions of young and aged rats was compared with changes observed in liver. Animals aged 3 months and 24 months were deprived of food for 48 h. GSH and amino acid levels from cerebral cortex, cerebellum, pons medulla, and liver were assayed and compared with levels in animals of the same age fed normal diets. In liver in both young and old rats, GSH levels fell 30%, from 13 mumol/g tissue to 8.7 mumol/g tissue. Significant changes were observed in other amino acids, including an increase of 30-50% in methionine, glycine, and glutamine, and a decrease of 30-50% in alanine in liver of both young and aged rats, and a 4-fold increase in taurine in young. In brain, little change was observed upon food deprivation. No decrease was observed in GSH, and only small changes were observed in other amino acids. In the aged animal aspartate, glutamate, and alanine levels were slightly lower; tyrosine in cerebellum was reduced by 30%, and both glycine and tyrosine in the pons medulla were reduced by 20-30%. In the brain areas examined, levels of GSH ranged from 1-2 mumol/g in young and 0.8-1.4 mumol/g in old; with levels in pons medulla being lower than those in cerebral cortex. In brain, in contrast to liver, levels were scarcely affected by short-term food deprivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0006-8993(95)00204-4DOI Listing

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