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Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen, AB21 9SB, United Kingdom
2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: g.lobley{at}rri.sari.ac.uk
With its many proposed metabolic roles, glutamine would seem to have
major potential in normal animal production systems as well as during
situations involving adverse challenges. In practice, however,
responses to glutamine supplementation have been inconsistent. Thus,
during lactation and growth studies in ruminants, both positive and
null effects on production responses have been reported. Similarly,
therapeutic responses to glutamine supplementation during various
digestive tract disorders have been inconsistent in both pigs and
ruminants. This is despite a proven involvement in the nucleic acid
biosynthesis necessary to support cell proliferation. In sheep, at
least, glutamine may exert a protective effect against hepatic amino
acid (AA) oxidation, particularly for methionine. This may offer
anabolic potential because methionine is the first limiting AA in a
number of animal feedstuffs. Glutamine is also important in control of
metabolic acidosis, but, in contrast to rodents, the main site of
production seems to be extra-hepatic. In the immune system, while
lymphocyte proliferation is glutamine-dependent, intracellular
concentrations are low (in contrast to other tissues, such as muscle
and liver). Instead, glutamate is accumulated, but the majority of this
(
65%) is derived in vivo from plasma glutamine. In sheep, endotoxin
challenge elevates the plasma flux of glutamine, with a corresponding
decrease in plasma concentration. At the same time, both the glutamate
accumulation and fractional rate of protein synthesis within
lymphocytes are enhanced. These lymphocyte responses, however, are not
altered by an AA supplement that contains glutamine. Overall, although
glutamine obviously plays important metabolic roles within the body,
supplementation does not appear to provide consistent beneficial or
therapeutic effects, except during certain catabolic situations.
Glutamine availability, therefore, does not seem to be a limitation in
many challenge situations. Rather, glutamine may signal alterations in
nutrient demands among organs and a better understanding of this role
may increase understanding of where modulation of glutamine status
would be beneficial.
KEY WORDS: glutamine digestive tract liver immune system endotoxin
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