## Abstract Myocardial lipid and lactate levels are sensitive indicators of biochemical status: lipid levels have been shown to increase in response to high fat diets, disease or metabolic stress and elevated lactate levels are indicative of reduced oxygen supply. Selective measurement of lactate o
1H NMR Detection of Lactate and Alanine in Perfused Rat Hearts during Global and Low Pressure Ischemia
β Scribed by Piyu Zhao; Charles J. Storey; Evelyn E. Babcock; Craig R. Malloy; A. Dean Sherry
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 784 KB
- Volume
- 33
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A spin-echo method is presented for obtaining high resolution, '"C coupled, proton spectra of lactate and alanine in intact, beating rat hearts. All hearts were depleted of glycogen prior to prolonged perfusion with either 10 mM unenriched glucose or [l-'3C]glucose to restore glycogen. These two groups of hearts were then examined by ' H NMR during prolonged global (zero flow) or low pressure (low flow) ischemia. During global ischemia, lactate was derived from both glucose and glycogen, with endogenous glycogen contributing twice as much lactate as exogenous glucose. During low perfusion pressure ischemia, however, lactate was derived exclusively from exogenous glucose. The entire pool of lactate (both '*C and '"C) was visible by NMR in intact, glucose perfused hearts while alanine was not detected. However, upon adding 10 mM pyruvate to the perfusate, the entire alanine pool became NMR visible while some of the lactate became NMR invisible. These observations indicate that the NMR visibility of small, usually highly mobile metabolites such as alanine and lactate is not always 100% in intact hearts and that the NMR visibility of these molecules may depend upon which exogenous substrate is presented to the heart.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Alanine is the major amino acid utilized by the liver for gluconeogenesis under normal conditions. The metabolism of alanine in rat liver was investigated by means of 1 H and 13 C NMR spectroscopic studies in vivo and in vitro after infusion of L-and D-alanine labelled with 13 C at the carboxyl and
## Abstract Each of six perfused rat hearts was subjected to 30 min of hypoxia followed by 60 min of reoxygenation. Inversionβrecovery data on the intracellular Na NMR signal, differentiated by a shift reagent, 6 m__M__ Dy(PPP)~2~, were obtained every 5 min, and __T__~1~ values were calculated. The