Elsevier

The Journal of Nutrition

Volume 140, Issue 8, August 2010, Pages 1432-1437
The Journal of Nutrition

Plasma Arginine and Ornithine Are the Main Citrulline Precursors in Mice Infused with Arginine-Free Diets1,2,3

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Abstract

Dietary arginine is the main dietary precursor for citrulline synthesis, but it is not known if other precursors can compensate when arginine is absent in the diet. To address this question, the contributions of plasma and dietary precursors were determined by using multitracer protocols in conscious mice infused i.g. either an arginine-sufficient diet [Arg(+)] or an arginine-free diet [Arg(−)]. The plasma entry rate of citrulline and arginine did not differ between the 2 diet groups (156 ± 6 and 564 ± 30 μmol·kg−1·h−1, respectively); however, the entry rate of ornithine was greater in the mice fed the Arg(+) than the Arg(−) diet (332 ± 33 vs. 180 ± 16 μmol·kg−1·h−1). There was a greater utilization of plasma ornithine for the synthesis of citrulline (49 ± 4 vs. 36 ± 3 μmol·kg−1·h−1, 30 ± 3% vs. 24 ± 2% of citrulline entry rate) in the mice fed the Arg(−) diet than the Arg(+) diet. The utilization of plasma arginine did not differ between the 2 diet groups for citrulline synthesis, either through plasma ornithine (∼29 ± 3 μmol·kg−1·h−1) or at the site of citrulline synthesis (∼12 ± 3 μmol·kg−1·h−1). The contribution of dietary proline to the synthesis of citrulline was mainly at the site of citrulline production (17 ± 1 μmol·kg−1·h−1), rather than through plasma ornithine (5 ± 0.4 μmol·kg−1·h−1). Dietary glutamine was utilized only at the site of citrulline synthesis (4 ± 0.2 μmol·kg−1·h−1). Dietary glutamine and proline made a greater contribution to the synthesis of citrulline in mice fed the Arg(−) diet but remained minor sources for citrulline production. Plasma arginine and ornithine are able to support citrulline synthesis during arginine-free feeding.

Abbreviations used:

Arg(+) diet
arginine-sufficient diet
Arg(–) diet
arginine-free diet
m/z
mass:charge ratio
Ra
rate of appearance

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1

Supported by USDA grant no. 2533771314 and NIH grant no. KO1 RR24173.

2

Author disclosures: J. C. Marini, I. C. Didelija, L. Castillo, and B. Lee, no conflicts of interest.

3

Supplemental Figure 1 and a Supplemental Appendix are available with the online posting of this paper at jn.nutrition.org.