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Circulating metabolite homeostasis achieved through mass action.

Xiaoxuan LiSheng HuiEmily T MirekWilliam O JonssonTracy G AnthonyWon Dong LeeXianfeng ZengCholsoon JangJoshua D Rabinowitz
Published in: Nature metabolism (2022)
Homeostasis maintains serum metabolites within physiological ranges. For glucose, this requires insulin, which suppresses glucose production while accelerating its consumption. For other circulating metabolites, a comparable master regulator has yet to be discovered. Here we show that, in mice, many circulating metabolites are cleared via the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) cycle in linear proportionality to their circulating concentration. Abundant circulating metabolites (essential amino acids, serine, alanine, citrate, 3-hydroxybutyrate) were administered intravenously in perturbative amounts and their fluxes were measured using isotope labelling. The increased circulating concentrations induced by the perturbative infusions hardly altered production fluxes while linearly enhancing consumption fluxes and TCA contributions. The same mass action relationship between concentration and consumption flux largely held across feeding, fasting and high- and low-protein diets, with amino acid homeostasis during fasting further supported by enhanced endogenous protein catabolism. Thus, despite the copious regulatory machinery in mammals, circulating metabolite homeostasis is achieved substantially through mass action-driven oxidation.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • ms ms
  • blood glucose
  • type diabetes
  • insulin resistance
  • blood pressure
  • metabolic syndrome
  • small molecule
  • mass spectrometry
  • skeletal muscle
  • nitric oxide
  • simultaneous determination
  • gas chromatography