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13 C NMR of glutamate for monitoring the pentose phosphate pathway in myocardium.

Eunsook S JinMin H LeeCraig R Malloy
Published in: NMR in biomedicine (2021)
After administration of 13 C-labeled glucose, the activity of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) is often assessed by the distribution of 13 C in lactate. However, in some tissues, such as the well-oxygenated heart, the concentration of lactate may be too low for convenient analysis by NMR. Here, we examined 13 C-labeled glutamate as an alternative biomarker of the PPP in the heart. Isolated rat hearts were perfused with media containing [2,3-13 C2 ]glucose and the tissue extracts were analyzed. Metabolism of [2,3-13 C2 ]glucose yields [1,2-13 C2 ]pyruvate via glycolysis and [2,3-13 C2 ]pyruvate via the PPP. Pyruvate is in exchange with lactate or is further metabolized to glutamate through pyruvate dehydrogenase and the TCA cycle. A doublet from [4,5-13 C2 ]glutamate, indicating flux through the PPP, was readily detected in 13 C NMR of heart extracts even when the corresponding doublet from [2,3-13 C2 ]lactate was minimal. Benfotiamine, known to induce the PPP, caused an increase in production of [4,5-13 C2 ]glutamate. In rats receiving [2,3-13 C2 ]glucose, brain extracts showed well-resolved signals from both [2,3-13 C2 ]lactate and [4,5-13 C2 ]glutamate in 13 C NMR spectra. Assessment of the PPP in the brain based on glutamate had a strong linear correlation with lactate-based assessment. In summary, 13 C NMR analysis of glutamate enabled detection of the low PPP activity in isolated hearts. This analyte is an alternative to lactate for monitoring the PPP with the use of [2,3-13 C2 ]glucose.
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