Regulation of Leucine Metabolism in Man: A Stable Isotope Study

Adult Male Carbon Isotopes Kinetics 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Nitrogen Isotopes Leucine Humans Models, Biological Oxidation-Reduction
DOI: 10.1126/science.7302583 Publication Date: 2006-10-05T17:45:58Z
ABSTRACT
Leucine catabolism is regulated by either of the first two degradative steps: (reversible) transamination to the keto acid or subsequent decarboxylation. A method is described to measure rates of leucine transamination, reamination, and keto acid oxidation. The method is applied directly to humans by infusing the nonradioactive tracer, L-[ 15 N,1- 13 C]leucine. Leucine transamination was found to be operating several times faster than the keto acid decarboxylation and to be of equal magnitude in adult human males under two different dietary conditions, postabsorptive and fed. These results indicate that decarboxylation, not transamination, is the rate-limiting step in normal human leucine metabolism.
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