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Publication : The effects of various inhibitors on the regulation of orotic acid excretion in sparse-fur mutant mice (spf/Y) deficient in ornithine transcarbamylase.

First Author  Nelson J Year  1993
Journal  Chem Biol Interact Volume  89
Issue  1 Pages  35-47
PubMed ID  8221965 Mgi Jnum  J:16786
Mgi Id  MGI:64847 Doi  10.1016/0009-2797(93)03195-z
Citation  Nelson J, et al. (1993) The effects of various inhibitors on the regulation of orotic acid excretion in sparse-fur mutant mice (spf/Y) deficient in ornithine transcarbamylase. Chem Biol Interact 89(1):35-47
abstractText  Experiments were conducted to determine whether the excessive orotic aciduria, induced in sparse-fur male mice (spf/Y) deficient in ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), may be regulated by some inhibitors, such as acivicin (0.014 mmol/100 g body weight, i.p.), N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA, 2.5 mg/100 g body weight, i.p.), adenine (3 g/kg diet) and cycloheximide (0.35 mmol/kg body weight, i.p.). We also administered ornithine (1 mmol/100 g body weight, i.p.), a substrate of the urea cycle, to alleviate the metabolic deficiency of arginine in spf/Y mice which may also be responsible for excessive orotic aciduria. The orotic aciduria remained insensitive to acivicin, indicating mitochondria as the source of carbamyl phosphate. However, orotate excretion was significantly decreased by PALA (P < 0.01), due to its effect on the aspartate transcarbamylase activity. The ingestion of adenine resulted in an increase (P < 0.05) of urinary orotate, suggesting the blockage of the utilization of orotate for nucleotide biosynthesis. Ornithine administration led to a reduction (P < 0.01) of the excretion of orotate induced by the OTC deficiency in these mice, indicating that one of the regulatory steps in its synthesis may be the availability of ornithine. There were no changes in urinary orotate excretion in spf/Y mice when treated with cycloheximide. On the other hand, pretreatment with cycloheximide in an artificial model of OTC deficiency (Swiss-ICR normal mice on an arginine-deficient diet treated thereafter with norvaline, an inhibitor of OTC), caused a significant decrease in urinary orotate. These results suggest that spf/Y mice are unique in that the increased synthesis of orotate is not sensitive to cycloheximide. Perhaps this may reflect an adaptive phenomenon developed by the mutant mice to handle excess mitochondrial carbamyl phosphate and orotic acid.
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