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Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition
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Role of the Lungs in Maintaining Amino Acid Homeostasis

Donald A. Plumley, M.D.

Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, J. Hillis Miller Health Science Center. Gainesville, Florida

Thomas R. Austgen, M.D.

Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, J. Hillis Miller Health Science Center. Gainesville, Florida

Rabih M. Salloum, M.D.

Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, J. Hillis Miller Health Science Center. Gainesville, Florida

Wiley W. Souba, M.D., SC.D.

Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, J. Hillis Miller Health Science Center. Gainesville, Florida

The relative contributions of skeletal muscle and the pulmonary bed in maintaining amino acid homeostasis were studied. Inasmuch as more than 60% of whole blood amino acid nitrogen is transported as glutamine and alanine, the flux of these two amino acids across the lungs (n = 20) and hindquarter (n = 20) was determined in the postabsorptive adult rat. Both skeletal muscle and the lungs released net amounts of glutamine and alanine in the postabsorptive state. Blood flow to the hindquarter was approximately 16% of cardiac output (3.8 ± 0.3 cc/100 g BW/min), while pulmonary blood flow (cardiac output) was 23.7 ± 1.7 cc/100 g BW/min. Thus, despite a lower glutamine concentration difference across the lungs (—32 ± 6 µmol/liter) compared with the hindquarter (—59 ± 10 pmol/liter (p < 0.01), the lungs released significantly more glutamine (741 ± 142 nmol/100 g BW/min) than the hindquarter (208 ± 39 nmol/100 g BW/min) (p < 0.01) because of the significantly higher pulmonary blood flow. Similarly, the concentration difference for alanine across the lungs was less than that of the hindquarter (-24 ± 8 µmol/liter us -60 ± 12 µmol/liter, p < 0.01) but the lungs released significantly more alanine than the hindquarter (553 ± 159 nmol/100 g BW/min us 221 ± 41 nrnolj100 g BW, p < 0.01. Compositional studies demonstrated that the hindquarter comprises 40% of total body muscle mass in the rat; thus both total skeletal muscle mass and the lungs contribute approximately equally to the maintenance of blood glutamine and alanine levels. The lungs, which are traditionally viewed as an organ of gas exchange, play a central role in maintaining amino acid homeostasis in the postabsorptive state. (Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition 14:569-573, 1990)

Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, Vol. 14, No. 6, 569-573 (1990)
DOI: 10.1177/0148607190014006569


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