Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/17135
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Type: Journal article
Title: The recycling of carbon in glucose, lactate and alanine in sheep
Author: Lindsay, D.
Barker, P.
Northrop, A.
Setchell, B.
Faichney, G.
Citation: Journal of Comparative Physiology B: biochemical, systemic, and environmental physiology, 2005; 175(6):413-422
Publisher: Springer
Issue Date: 2005
ISSN: 0174-1578
1432-136X
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Responsibility: 
Derek B. Lindsay, Patrick J. Barker, Andrew J. Northrop, Brian P. Setchell, Graham J. Faichney
Abstract: Pregnant ewes with catheters implanted in an artery and the uterine and recurrent tarsal veins were infused at a constant rate with U−¹⁴C-labelled glucose, alanine or bicarbonate. Measurements were made of the overall and local fractional contribution of glucose and alanine to CO₂ production and of the extent of interconversion of these metabolites. In the whole animal, by coupling the results with the authors’ previous study of lactate metabolism, a solution was obtained to an open unrestricted 4-compartment model of the exchange of carbon between glucose, lactate, alanine and CO₂. A more limited study was made with non-pregnant sheep because complete data for lactate interactions with alanine were not available. Our analysis of glucose/lactate/alanine/CO₂ interactions in pregnant sheep suggests that about two-thirds of the glycogenic carbon was oxidised fairly directly to CO₂. There was relatively little recycling of glucose carbon through lactate and alanine so that most of the remaining glycogenic carbon was stored as product with relatively long turnover time. It is possible that much of this was in the form of muscle glycogen, and analysis of glycogenic carbon exchange across the hind limb muscle was consistent with this conclusion. In non-pregnant ewes, the findings, although incomplete, suggested that there were no great differences from the findings in pregnant ewes.
Keywords: Pregnant uterus
Muscle
Glucose
Alanine
Lactate
Irreversible loss
Fractional extraction
Oxidation
Compartmental analysis
DOI: 10.1007/s00360-005-0003-5
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00360-005-0003-5
Appears in Collections:Anatomical Sciences publications
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