Journalartikel

Which mechanisms are involved in taurine-dependent granulocytic immune response or amino- and α-keto acid homeostasis?


AutorenlisteMuelling, J.; Nickolaus, K. A.; Matejec, R.; Langefeld, T. W.; Harbach, H.; Engel, J.; Wolff, M.; Weismueller, K.; Fuchs, M.; Welters, I. D.; Kruell, M.; Heidt, M. C.; Hempelmann, G.

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2008

Seiten257-270

ZeitschriftAmino Acids

Bandnummer34

Heftnummer2

ISSN0939-4451

eISSN1438-2199

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-007-0497-0

VerlagSpringer


Abstract
We examined the effects of beta-alanine (taurine analogue and taurine transport antagonist), taurine (regarding its role in neutrophil (PMN) immunonutrition) and taurine combined either with L-NAME (inhibitor of center dot NO-synthase), SNAP (center dot NO donor), DON (glutamine-analogue and inhibitor of glutamine-requiring enzymes), DFMO (inhibitor of ornithine-decarboxylase) and beta-alanine on neutrophil amino- and alpha-keto acid profiles or important PMN immune functions in order to establish whether taurine transport-, nitric oxide-, glutamine- or ornithine-dependent mechanisms are involved in any of the taurine-induced effects. According to the present findings, the taurine-mediated effect appears to be based primarily on a modulation of important transmembraneous transport mechanisms and only secondarily on directly or indirectly induced modifications in intragranulocytic amino- and alpha-keto acid homoeostasis or metabolism. Although a direct relation to the parallel observed immunological modifications can only be presumed, these results show very clearly that compositional modifications in the free intragranulocytic amino- and alpha keto-acid pools coinciding with changes in intragranulocytic taurine levels are relevant metabolic determinants that can significantly influence the magnitude and quality of the granulocytic immune response.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilMuelling, J., Nickolaus, K., Matejec, R., Langefeld, T., Harbach, H., Engel, J., et al. (2008) Which mechanisms are involved in taurine-dependent granulocytic immune response or amino- and α-keto acid homeostasis?, Amino Acids, 34(2), pp. 257-270. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-007-0497-0

APA-ZitierstilMuelling, J., Nickolaus, K., Matejec, R., Langefeld, T., Harbach, H., Engel, J., Wolff, M., Weismueller, K., Fuchs, M., Welters, I., Kruell, M., Heidt, M., & Hempelmann, G. (2008). Which mechanisms are involved in taurine-dependent granulocytic immune response or amino- and α-keto acid homeostasis?. Amino Acids. 34(2), 257-270. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-007-0497-0



Schlagwörter


ALANYL-L-GLUTAMINEalpha-keto acidsbeta-alanineBLOOD-CELLDFMOHOST-DEFENSEHYPOCHLOROUS ACIDIMMUNE FUNCTIONL-NAMEneutrophils (PMN)ORGANIC OSMOLYTESPOLYMORPHONUCLEAR LEUKOCYTESQUANTITATIVE-DETERMINATIONSNAPSUPEROXIDE ANIONtaurine


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