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CARNITINE

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... 300 moles/5 liters, 40-60 moles/L. skeletal muscle 2000-3000 moles/kg ... No enough acetyl-CoA for citric acid cycle and activation of pyruvate carboxylase, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CARNITINE


1
CARNITINE
  • Gamma-hydroxi-N-trimethylamino-butyrate

2
  • Sources of blood carnitine
  • a.) mainly animal source food 1-8 , 300
    µmole/day
  • b.) we synthesize in liver (brain, kidney) 1-2,
    100 µmoles/day
  • c.) in kidney absorbed from the filtrate to the
    blood 92-98 (most important)
  • Excretion
  • - by urine 400 µmoles/day
  • through gut changable amount
  • Tissue content
  • blood plasm 300 µmoles/5 liters, 40-60 µmoles/L
  • skeletal muscle 2000-3000 µmoles/kg
  • liver, heart 800-1500 µmoles/kg
  • other tissues 600-700 µM
  • all carnitine in tissues 50000 µmoles

3
  • Carnitine concentration is bigger in every cells
    than in blood, therefore the entrance is always
    active transport, the departure is passive.
  • Carnitine is ionic (zwitter ion), so it requires
    in every membrane (plasma, mitochondria, ER) a
    protein transporter.
  • Synthesis
  • Last step is only in liver (brain and kidney
    insufficient amount).
  • Starts from proteins, on Lys
  • Localization of steps one after each other
    nucleus, lysosome, mitochondria, cytoplasm
  • Requires SAM (Met), Lys, ascorbate, PLP, NAD,
    enzymes
  • Vitamin or enzyme deficiency leads to improper
    synthesis, but food carnitine is enough.
  • Strict vegetarian people can not eat high
    amount, but absorption from gut becomes more
    efficient.
  • When carnitine transporter in the kidney does not
    function, carnitine is exreted by the urine,
    causing systemic carnitine deficiency in all the
    body.

4
Carnitine transporters in the membranes
  • 1.) OCTN2 organic cation transporter(uniporter)
    high affinity carnitine/Na symporter Kt 1-6
    microMcarnitine reabsorption from the filtrate
    to the blood in the apical tubular cells in
    kidneycarnitine entrance from blood to cells
    skel. mucle, heart, pancreas, placenta, brain,
    lung, testis, fibroblastOCTN2 transporter
    protein hereditary deficiency leads to systemic
    carnitine deficiency
  • 2.) OCTN3 intermediate affinity carnitine
    specific uniporter Kt 20 µMspermium, liver
    peroxisome
  • 3.) OCT 1,2,3 intermediate affinity organic
    cation uniporters or exchangersbasal membrane of
    tubular cells in kidney, intestine, muscle, testis

5
4.) OCTN1 low affinity organic cation/ H
antiporter Kt gt 500 µM in kidney proximal
tubules acyl-carnitines alkaloids, medicines
etc. are exreted to filtrate from cells of
lung, bone marrow, protate, placenta, pancreas,
heart, uterus, spleen, testis... to blood in
mitochondrial inner membrane 5.) ATBo, is a
basic amino acid uniporter Kt 0.8 mM lung,
intestine, mammary gland 6.) small affinity
carnitine/Na symporter high affinity
gamma-butyrobetain/Na symporter in liver,
brain Carnitine is synthesized from
gamma-butyrobetain in one step.
6
  • Function of carnitine
  • 1.) Entrance of LCFA (long chain fatty acids) to
    mitochondria, ER, peroxisome
  • 2.) Leaving of SC(F)A short chain acids from cell
    organells and cells to excrete out of the cells
    and the body (as acyl-carnitine).
  • In case of OCTN2 hereditary deficiency carnitine
    can not be reabsorbed from filtrate, rather it
    is flowed out of the body, causing systemic
    deficiency.
  • Signs of systemic carnitine deficiency
  • Never nowhere fatty acids can enter to
    mitochondria to be oxidized, therefore
  • always everywhere glucose (and amino acids) are
    degraded to yield energy, glucose is consumed
    very fast, causing between meals life
    threatening hypoglycemia, coma
  • in liver, muscle etc. PDHC is not inhibited by
    acetyl-CoA (from FA oxidation) during fasting,
    glucose is not spared for obligate glucose
    consuming tissues

7
  • No enough acetyl-CoA for citric acid cycle and
    activation of pyruvate carboxylase, gluconeogenes
    is does not proceed, glucose is not replenished.
  • In starvation in liver no ketone body synthesis
    (from FA derived acetyl-CoA), so the brain can
    not gain them instead of glucose.
  • Heart always oxidizes FAs, skeletal muscle uses
    FAs in resting and long term exercise. Without
    FA beta-oxidation no enough ATP for
    movement, causing tiredness, heart hyperthrophy,
    progressing cardiomyopathy, death of 2-4 years
    old child
  • FAs can not enter to cell organells, they are
    accumulated in cytoplasm activating TAG
    synthesizing enzymes, causing lipid degeneration
    in liver, heart, muscle etc.
  • Therapy
  • Big dose of oral carnitine during the whole life
    for little affinity carnitine transporters to
    work.
  • 5 of normal concentration in cells is enough.
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