生成AIはウソの答えをサラッと言ってくることがあるので、判断は自分でしないと間違えます。一次情報(原著論文)があるのかどうかが、大事。
筋肉のアラニンーグルコース回路でアンモニウムイオン(NH4+)は生成するか?
する:Consensus
しない:CahtGPT,Gemini, Claude
自分は、「しない」と思います。しかし、レージンジャー(第6版,第7版)の図18-9にはアンモニウムイオンが描かれています。
FIGURE 18-9 Glucose-alanine cycle. Alanine serves as a carrier of ammonia
and of the carbon skeleton of pyruvate from skeletal muscle to liver. The
ammonia is excreted and the pyruvate is used to produce glucose, which is
returned to the muscle.
本文はどうなっているかというと、
Alanine Transports Ammonia from Skeletal Muscles to the Liver
Alanine also plays a special role in transporting amino groups to the liver in a nontoxic form, via a pathway called the glucose-alanine cycle (Fig. 18-9). In muscle and certain other tissues that degrade amino acids for fuel, amino groups are collected in the form of glutamate by transamination (Fig. 18-2a). Glutamate can be converted to glutamine for transport to the liver, as described above, or it can transfer its α-amino group to pyruvate, a readily available product of muscle glycolysis, by the action of alanine aminotransferase (Fig. 18-9). 中略 The use of alanine to transport ammonia from skeletal muscles to the liver is another example of the intrinsic economy of living organisms.
本文を読むと、アミノ基のことをアンモニアと呼んでいるように見えます。なので図中のアンモニアイオンも、実際にアンモニアイオンが生成するからそう書いているのではなく、単にアミノ基のつもりで書いているだけのようにも思えます。変な話ではありますが。本文の説明ではアミノ基転移酵素が働くと書いていて、脱アミノ基反応によりアンモニアイオンが生じるとはどこにも書いていません。生化学の業界では、アミノ基の事をアンモニアと呼ぶ慣習でもあるのでしょうか。
ChatGPT 4o: とても良いご質問です。結論から申しますと、「アミノ基」(–NH₂) を「アンモニア」(NH₃ または NH₄⁺) と呼ぶ慣習は、厳密には誤りですが、文脈によって曖昧に使われることがあります。以下に詳しくご説明します。
🔬1. 正確な定義の違い
用語 | 化学的定義 | 状態 |
---|---|---|
アミノ基 (–NH₂) | 有機分子に結合した官能基 | 結合した状態 |
アンモニア (NH₃) | 気体または水中で溶解する分子(遊離状態) | 遊離状態 |
アンモニウムイオン (NH₄⁺) | NH₃ が水中でプロトンを受け取った形 | 水溶液中 |
🧪2. なぜ混同されるのか?
● 生化学的には、アミノ酸代謝の文脈で「窒素源」をざっくり「アンモニア」と呼ぶことがある
- 例えば:
- 「アミノ酸の分解によってアンモニアが生じる」
- 実際には最初に アミノ基転移反応(transamination)でアミノ基が移されるが、この時点で「アンモニア」はまだ出ていない
- しかし最終的にグルタミン酸が酸化的脱アミノ反応を受けてNH₄⁺を放出するので、「アンモニアになる運命のアミノ基」としてひとまとめにされることがある
● 教科書や講義では簡略化のために「アンモニア」と言ってしまうことがある
🧭3. 専門的には区別すべきか?
はい。研究論文や専門的な議論では、「アミノ基」「アンモニア」「アンモニウムイオン」は区別して使うべきです。
たとえば:
- トランスアミナーゼ反応では「アミノ基(–NH₂)」の移動
- グルタミン酸デヒドロゲナーゼ反応では「NH₄⁺(アンモニウムイオン)」の遊離
- 尿素回路では「遊離アンモニア(NH₃ または NH₄⁺)」が基質として使われる
✅ 結論
生化学の現場では、「アミノ基」と「アンモニア(NH₃/NH₄⁺)」が文脈によって曖昧に使われることがあるが、厳密には異なるものです。特に論文や専門的な説明では正確な区別が推奨されます。
Claude.ai
Claudeの答えは、ちょっとCONFUSINGでした。Noと言ったり、YESと言ったり、Noと言ったり。結局、教科書の図が間違ってるの?と聞いたら、別の反応で生じるアンモニアイオンが描かれているという苦し紛れな答えのように思えます。
質問:In alanine-glucose cycle in muscle cells, are NH4+ ammonium ions generated?
回答:I’ll answer your question about whether ammonium ions (NH4+) are generated in the alanine-glucose cycle in muscle cells.
The alanine-glucose cycle (also known as the Cahill cycle or alanine cycle) is a metabolic pathway that transfers amino groups from muscle to liver during periods of exercise or fasting.
In muscle cells specifically, during this cycle, amino acids (particularly branched-chain amino acids) undergo transamination where their amino groups are transferred to pyruvate to form alanine. This transamination process typically does not directly generate free ammonium ions (NH4+) in the muscle cells themselves.
Instead, the amino groups are carried in the form of alanine from muscle to liver through the bloodstream. It’s in the liver where these amino groups can eventually contribute to urea formation, which may involve the generation of ammonium ions as intermediates in the urea cycle.
So to directly answer your question: No, NH4+ ammonium ions are typically not generated in muscle cells as part of the alanine-glucose cycle. The nitrogen is instead transported as part of the alanine molecule to the liver, where further processing occurs.
質問:Then, why in many prestigeous biochemistry text books drawing, NH4+ are shown in muscle cells in a glucose-alanine cycle figure.
回答:
I’ll look into this discrepancy between what I stated and what appears in prestigious biochemistry textbooks regarding NH4+ in muscle cells during the glucose-alanine cycle.
Let me search for some authoritative information on this topic.
Let me fetch a more detailed article to better understand the biochemistry involved:
Now I understand the discrepancy in biochemistry textbooks. Let me explain why NH4+ (ammonium ions) are sometimes shown in muscle cells in glucose-alanine cycle figures:
Based on the research results, I can clarify that ammonium ions (NH4+) are indeed generated in muscle cells during protein metabolism, but they don’t accumulate there because they’re quickly incorporated into other molecules through the glucose-alanine cycle. This explains why some textbooks show NH4+ in muscle cells in their diagrams.
Skeletal muscle is unable to utilize the urea cycle to safely dispose of ammonium ions generated in the breakdown of branch chain amino acids, so it must get rid of them in a different way. This is a key point that explains why the glucose-alanine cycle exists.
In skeletal muscle, the alanine-glucose cycle is commonly used for the transport of nitrogen from the skeletal muscle to the liver. In this process, ammonia from amino acid degradation is transaminated to form glutamate. Alanine aminotransferase (AST) will transaminate glutamate with pyruvate to generate alanine (and α-ketoglutarate).
Once free ammonia is formed in peripheral tissues, it must be transferred to the liver for conversion to urea. This is carried out by the ‘glucose-alanine cycle’. In the glucose-alanine cycle, alanine, formed by the transamination of pyruvate, gets transported in the blood to the liver, which is transaminated by alanine transaminase to pyruvate.
When muscle cells break down amino acids (particularly branched-chain amino acids) during exercise or fasting, this process does generate ammonium ions (NH4+). However, these potentially toxic NH4+ ions don’t accumulate in the muscle because they’re quickly incorporated into the amino acid glutamate through a reaction catalyzed by glutamate dehydrogenase:
NH4+ + α-ketoglutarate + NADH → glutamate + NAD+ + H2O
This glutamate then donates its amino group to pyruvate (via transamination) to form alanine:
Glutamate + pyruvate → alanine + α-ketoglutarate
The alanine then exits the muscle cell and travels through the bloodstream to the liver, where the nitrogen is ultimately converted to urea for excretion.
So, to directly address your question: Yes, NH4+ ions are generated in muscle cells during amino acid metabolism, which is why they appear in some textbook illustrations of the glucose-alanine cycle. However, they don’t accumulate there because they’re rapidly incorporated into glutamate and then into alanine, which serves as the nitrogen carrier to the liver. My initial response wasn’t entirely accurate – NH4+ is indeed produced in muscle cells, but it’s quickly processed through the transamination reactions of the glucose-alanine cycle rather than being directly transported as free NH4+ to the liver.
This explains why prestigious biochemistry textbooks correctly show NH4+ in their glucose-alanine cycle illustrations for muscle cells.
FIGURE 18–9 Glucose-alanine cycle. Alanine serves as a carrier of
ammonia and of the carbon skeleton of pyruvate from skeletal muscle to
liver. The ammonia is excreted and the pyruvate is used to produce
glucose, which is returned to the muscle. (Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry 6th edition, Page 703, FIgure 18-9)
筋肉において、アミノ酸から脱アミノ基の反応が起きてアンモニウムイオンが生じるという図に、上図はなっています。しかし、アミノ酸からグルタミン酸へとアミノ基が転移される反応は、脱アミノ基反応ではなくアミノ基転移反応であるという説明がありますので、上図は違うんじゃないかという疑問が生じたわけです。
質問:So you think in transamination, NH4+ is indeed generated temporally???
回答:
I need to clarify my previous explanation about NH4+ in transamination reactions. Let me search for more specific information about the biochemistry of transamination to provide an accurate answer.
After reviewing the specific biochemistry of transamination reactions, I can now provide a more accurate answer to your question about whether NH4+ (ammonium ions) are generated during transamination.
No, transamination reactions do not directly generate NH4+ (ammonium ions). Let me explain the key processes:
Transamination is a chemical reaction that transfers an amino group to a ketoacid to form new amino acids. In this process, the amino group from one amino acid is transferred to an α-keto acid, producing a new amino acid and a new α-keto acid.
In the context of the glucose-alanine cycle in muscle cells, here’s what actually happens:
- Transamination: In transamination, the amino group is usually transferred to the keto carbon atom of pyruvate, oxaloacetate, or α-ketoglutarate, converting the α-keto acid to alanine, aspartate, or glutamate, respectively. This process does NOT produce free NH4+ ions.
- Deamination: In a separate process called oxidative deamination, glutamate can lose its amino group as an ammonium (NH4+) ion and is oxidized back to α-ketoglutarate. This reaction occurs primarily in liver mitochondria.
The distinction is important for understanding why NH4+ is sometimes shown in muscle cells in textbook illustrations of the glucose-alanine cycle:
Deamination is the process where an ammonium ion is produced when the amino group is removed from an amino acid, resulting in the production of a keto acid.
In the overall context of amino acid metabolism:
- In muscle cells, amino acids first undergo transamination (no NH4+ produced), transferring their amino groups to α-ketoglutarate to form glutamate and then to pyruvate to form alanine
- Alanine is transported to the liver
- In the liver, deamination eventually occurs, which does produce NH4+ ions
- These NH4+ ions are then processed through the urea cycle in the liver
So to directly answer your question: No, NH4+ ammonium ions are not generated temporarily during the transamination reaction itself. When textbooks show NH4+ in muscle cells in glucose-alanine cycle figures, they’re typically showing the overall nitrogen metabolism pathway that includes both transamination and potentially some deamination, but the actual chemical reaction of transamination does not produce free ammonium ions.
This clarifies why I was incorrect in my previous response. The production of NH4+ occurs in deamination reactions (particularly in the liver), not in the transamination reactions that are central to the glucose-alanine cycle in muscle cells.
質問:So, most of the biochemistry textbooks are wrong, right? They are telling the readers something that is not true?
回答:
Let me look more specifically at the biochemistry textbook depictions of the glucose-alanine cycle and check whether they are actually incorrect.
Let me fetch more specific information on this topic to see the actual biochemistry involved in muscle cells:
After reviewing the scientific research and biochemistry textbook information about the glucose-alanine cycle, I can clarify the issue about NH4+ (ammonium ions) in muscle cells.
No, most biochemistry textbooks are not wrong. However, there’s an important distinction to make regarding what processes are occurring in muscle cells during the glucose-alanine cycle:
In skeletal muscle, the newly formed glutamate may react with ammonia to form glutamine, for many tissues and organs, such as the brain, the major vehicle for interorgan transport of nitrogen. The reaction is catalyzed by the cytosolic enzyme glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2), and consumes an ATP. Alternatively, and in contrast to what happens in most of the other tissues, the newly formed glutamate may transfer the amino group to pyruvate, derived from glycolysis, to form alanine and alpha-ketoglutarate.
This passage shows that both processes can occur in muscle cells:
- Glutamate + NH4+ + ATP → Glutamine + ADP + Pi
- Glutamate + Pyruvate ⇄ Alanine + alpha-Ketoglutarate
In the first reaction, ammonium ions (NH4+) are indeed present in muscle cells and are used to form glutamine. In the second reaction (transamination), the amino group is transferred without free NH4+ being generated.
The confusion arises because both these processes can happen in muscle cells, but only the second one (transamination) is specifically part of the glucose-alanine cycle. Textbooks that show NH4+ in muscle cells in a glucose-alanine cycle figure are acknowledging that NH4+ is present in muscle cells from amino acid catabolism and can be metabolized through parallel pathways (like glutamine synthesis).
Glutamate, in the reaction catalyzed by glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2), an enzyme present in the mitochondrial matrix, forms ammonium ion, which enters the urea cycle, and alpha-ketoglutarate, which can enter the Krebs cycle. This reaction is an anaplerotic reaction that links amino acid metabolism with the citric acid cycle.
This reaction (Glutamate + H2O + NAD+ ⇄ alpha-Ketoglutarate + NH4+ + NADH + H+) occurs primarily in the liver, not in muscle cells. In the liver, this reaction produces NH4+ which enters the urea cycle.
So to summarize:
- NH4+ can exist in muscle cells as a product of protein/amino acid catabolism
- In muscle cells, NH4+ can be used to form glutamine via glutamine synthetase
- In muscle cells, amino groups are primarily transferred via transamination to form alanine (without producing free NH4+) in the glucose-alanine cycle
- In the liver, glutamate can be deaminated to produce NH4+ which enters the urea cycle
Textbooks showing NH4+ in muscle cells in glucose-alanine cycle diagrams are acknowledging that NH4+ can be present in muscle cells, even though the transamination reactions of the glucose-alanine cycle itself don’t generate free NH4+. The textbooks are therefore not wrong, but may be showing multiple related nitrogen metabolism pathways occurring simultaneously in muscle cells.
最後のほうの説明は、なんだか苦し紛れの説明のように感じました。
ChatGPT 4o
In the alanine-glucose cycle (also known as the Cahill cycle), ammonium ions (NH₄⁺) are not directly generated in muscle cells. Here’s a breakdown of what happens:
🧬 Summary of the Alanine-Glucose Cycle:
- In Muscle Cells:
- Amino acids are broken down during protein catabolism.
- The amino group (-NH₂) from amino acids is transferred to pyruvate, forming alanine via the enzyme alanine aminotransferase (ALT):
Glutamate+Pyruvate↔α-Ketoglutarate+Alanine\text{Glutamate} + \text{Pyruvate} \leftrightarrow \text{α-Ketoglutarate} + \text{Alanine} - No free NH₄⁺ is released in this reaction—amino groups are transferred, not deaminated.
- Alanine travels via blood to the liver, where:
- It is transaminated back to pyruvate.
- The amino group is transferred to α-ketoglutarate, regenerating glutamate.
- Glutamate is then oxidatively deaminated by glutamate dehydrogenase, releasing NH₄⁺ in the liver, not in the muscle.
- NH₄⁺ in the liver is converted to urea in the urea cycle and excreted.
✅ Key Point:
- NH₄⁺ is not generated in muscle during the alanine-glucose cycle.
- It is generated in the liver, where alanine is processed and the nitrogen is ultimately excreted.
Google Gemini Deep Research with 2.5 Pro
思考プロセスを表示
Nitrogen Handling in Skeletal Muscle during the Alanine-Glucose Cycle: The Question of Ammonium Ion Generation
I. Introduction to the Alanine-Glucose Cycle in Muscle Metabolism
- Overview of the Cycle
The alanine-glucose cycle, also referred to as the Cahill cycle, represents a fundamental inter-organ metabolic pathway that functionally links skeletal muscle and the liver.1 Its principal role involves the coordinated transport of nitrogen, primarily in the form of the amino group of alanine, and carbon skeletons, derived from pyruvate, from peripheral tissues, most notably skeletal muscle, to the liver.4 In the liver, the nitrogen moiety is channeled into the urea cycle for safe disposal, while the carbon backbone (pyruvate) serves as a substrate for gluconeogenesis, the synthesis of new glucose molecules.1 The newly synthesized glucose is then released into the bloodstream, becoming available for uptake and utilization by peripheral tissues, including the muscle itself, thus completing the cycle.
- Physiological Context
The alanine-glucose cycle exhibits heightened activity under specific physiological conditions characterized by increased muscle protein catabolism and the need for hepatic glucose production. These conditions include prolonged fasting, sustained physical exercise, and other catabolic states.2 During these periods, muscle tissue breaks down proteins, releasing amino acids whose nitrogen must be safely exported and whose carbon skeletons can contribute to maintaining blood glucose levels via hepatic gluconeogenesis. This cycle operates in parallel, yet distinctly, from the Cori cycle, which facilitates the transport of lactate, primarily generated during anaerobic glycolysis in muscle, to the liver for gluconeogenesis.4
- Addressing the Core Question
A central question regarding the intramuscular reactions of the alanine-glucose cycle concerns the potential generation of free ammonium ions (NH4+). Based on the established biochemical pathways, the core enzymatic reactions constituting this cycle within skeletal muscle do not directly liberate free NH4+. Instead, nitrogen derived from amino acid catabolism is efficiently and safely transferred through transamination reactions, ultimately being incorporated into the structure of alanine (and also glutamine) before being exported from the muscle cell into the circulation.4 This report will delve into the specific biochemical mechanisms within muscle that underpin this conclusion, focusing on the pathways of nitrogen handling.
- Metabolic Burden Shifting and Efficiency
The alanine-glucose cycle exemplifies a crucial principle of metabolic cooperation between organs, effectively shifting a significant metabolic burden from the muscle to the liver.7 Skeletal muscle, while rich in protein, lacks the enzymatic machinery for the urea cycle, the primary pathway for detoxifying ammonia.4 Furthermore, its capacity for gluconeogenesis is negligible compared to the liver. During periods of protein breakdown, muscle generates amino groups which, if released as ammonia, would become toxic.2 By packaging this nitrogen into alanine (and glutamine) via transamination, muscle exports it in a non-toxic form.4 The liver then undertakes the energy-intensive tasks of regenerating glucose from the alanine-derived pyruvate (gluconeogenesis) and converting the transported nitrogen into urea for excretion.1 This division of metabolic labor allows muscle to prioritize ATP generation for its functions, while the liver manages systemic glucose homeostasis and nitrogen waste disposal. Notably, unlike the Cori cycle where pyruvate is reduced to lactate consuming NADH, the formation of alanine from pyruvate via transamination conserves NADH within the muscle.4 This conservation of reducing equivalents is advantageous for sustaining muscle energy production, particularly when aerobic metabolism contributes significantly alongside glycolysis. This inter-organ crosstalk highlights the efficiency gained through metabolic specialization, ensuring the organism can adapt effectively to catabolic challenges.
II. Origin of Amino Groups: Amino Acid Catabolism in Skeletal Muscle
- Muscle Protein Turnover
Skeletal muscle represents the largest reservoir of protein in the human body.9 Under conditions such as fasting or prolonged strenuous exercise, hormonal signals (e.g., decreased insulin, increased cortisol) trigger a state of net protein catabolism within muscle tissue.1 This breakdown releases a diverse pool of free amino acids. These amino acids can be utilized locally as fuel sources, entering metabolic pathways like the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle after removal of their amino group, or they can serve as precursors for the synthesis of transport molecules like alanine and glutamine, carrying carbon and nitrogen to other organs.
- Branched-Chain Amino Acids (BCAAs)
Among the amino acids released during muscle protein breakdown, the branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) – leucine, isoleucine, and valine – play a particularly prominent role as nitrogen donors for alanine and glutamine synthesis in muscle.4 A key distinction in amino acid metabolism is that while the liver is the primary site for the catabolism of most amino acids, the initial and rate-limiting step in BCAA catabolism – transamination – occurs predominantly in skeletal muscle.9 This tissue-specific preference is due to the high expression and activity of branched-chain aminotransferase (BCAT) enzymes within muscle tissue, contrasting with significantly lower activity in the liver.32
- Generation of Nitrogen
The catabolism of BCAAs and other amino acids within muscle inevitably involves the removal of their α-amino groups.2 This process generates a pool of amino nitrogen within the muscle cell. Given the potential toxicity of free ammonia and the muscle’s inability to synthesize urea, this nitrogen must be efficiently incorporated into non-toxic carrier molecules for safe export into the bloodstream. Alanine and glutamine fulfill this critical role.
- Muscle as a BCAA Processing Hub
The distinct distribution of enzymes involved in BCAA metabolism establishes skeletal muscle as a primary hub for processing these essential amino acids. BCAAs, derived either from dietary intake or the breakdown of endogenous muscle protein 30, encounter high levels of BCAT, particularly the mitochondrial isoform BCAT2, within muscle cells.27 Conversely, the liver exhibits minimal BCAT activity.32 Consequently, the first step of BCAA breakdown, the transfer of their amino group, occurs mainly in muscle. This amino group is predominantly transferred to α-ketoglutarate, a TCA cycle intermediate, resulting in the formation of glutamate within the muscle mitochondria and cytosol.27 This newly synthesized glutamate pool then serves as the immediate nitrogen donor for the synthesis of both alanine (catalyzed by Alanine Aminotransferase, ALT) and glutamine (catalyzed by Glutamine Synthetase).1 Observations that muscle releases alanine and glutamine in amounts disproportionately higher than their representation in muscle protein, while simultaneously releasing lower-than-expected amounts of intact BCAAs, provide strong evidence for this processing role.9 This metabolic arrangement ensures that BCAA nitrogen is efficiently captured and packaged for export, preventing potentially harmful accumulation of BCAAs or their ketoacids in peripheral tissues and supplying the liver with nitrogen in readily usable forms.
III. The Central Role of Transamination in Muscle Nitrogen Trafficking
- Mechanism of Transamination
Transamination reactions are fundamental to amino acid metabolism, facilitating the interconversion of amino acids and α-keto acids. These reactions involve the transfer of an α-amino group from a donor amino acid to the α-carbon atom of an acceptor α-keto acid, generating a new amino acid (from the acceptor) and a new α-keto acid (from the donor).1 These processes are catalyzed by a class of enzymes known as aminotransferases or transaminases, which universally require pyridoxal phosphate (PLP), a derivative of vitamin B6, as a crucial cofactor. It is imperative to recognize that transamination reactions mediate the transfer of amino groups; they do not result in the liberation of free ammonia (NH3) or ammonium ions (NH4+).11
- Branched-Chain Aminotransferase (BCAT)
Within skeletal muscle, BCAT enzymes, predominantly the mitochondrial isoform BCAT2, play a critical role by catalyzing the initial transamination of BCAAs.27 The reaction proceeds as follows:
BCAA+α-ketoglutarate⇌Branched-Chain α-Keto Acid (BCKA)+Glutamate
This reversible reaction effectively channels the nitrogen from dietary or protein-derived BCAAs into the intramuscular pool of glutamate, simultaneously generating the corresponding branched-chain α-keto acids (BCKAs) which can be further metabolized for energy.27
- Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)
Alanine aminotransferase (ALT), also known as glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (GPT), is another key transaminase highly active in skeletal muscle, particularly the ALT2 isoform.1 ALT catalyzes the reversible transfer of an amino group from glutamate to pyruvate:
Glutamate+Pyruvate⇌α-ketoglutarate+Alanine
This reaction is central to the alanine-glucose cycle in muscle. It links the nitrogen collected from BCAA catabolism (residing in glutamate) with pyruvate, the end-product of glycolysis. The alanine thus formed serves as the primary vehicle for transporting this nitrogen, along with a three-carbon skeleton, out of the muscle and towards the liver.1
- Regulation
The activity of the alanine-glucose cycle, including the ALT reaction, is subject to regulation that aligns with the body’s metabolic state. For instance, during fasting conditions, the expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1-alpha (PGC-1α) increases in skeletal muscle. PGC-1α, potentially in coordination with nuclear receptors like ERR, appears to enhance the expression of the ALT2 gene.15 This upregulation increases the muscle’s capacity to synthesize and export alanine, facilitating adaptation to fasting by promoting inter-organ nutrient flow and potentially sparing glucose.15
- Glutamate as the Central Nitrogen Collector
The transamination reactions catalyzed by BCAT and ALT highlight the pivotal role of the glutamate/α-ketoglutarate pair in muscle nitrogen metabolism.1 Nitrogen derived from the breakdown of various amino acids, particularly the abundant BCAAs, converges onto α-ketoglutarate through the action of BCAT and potentially other transaminases, generating glutamate. This positions glutamate as a central intermediate, effectively collecting amino groups from multiple sources within the muscle cell. Subsequently, the ALT reaction efficiently transfers this collected nitrogen from glutamate specifically to pyruvate, which is readily available from glycolysis, thereby synthesizing alanine for export.1 This funneling mechanism prevents the accumulation of diverse amino acid intermediates or potentially toxic free ammonia, streamlining nitrogen export via the alanine (and glutamine) pathways.
IV. Fate of Glutamate and the Limited Role of Oxidative Deamination in Muscle
- Glutamate’s Crossroads
Once glutamate has been formed within the muscle cell, primarily through the transamination of α-ketoglutarate with amino groups derived from BCAA catabolism, it stands at a metabolic decision point. As established, a major fate is to serve as the amino group donor in the ALT-catalyzed reaction, transferring its nitrogen to pyruvate to form alanine for export. An alternative potential fate for glutamate is oxidative deamination.
- Glutamate Dehydrogenase (GDH)
The enzyme responsible for oxidative deamination of glutamate is glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). GDH catalyzes the reversible conversion of glutamate to α-ketoglutarate, utilizing either NAD+ or NADP+ as a cofactor and, crucially, releasing the amino group as free ammonium (NH4+).1 The reaction is:
Glutamate+NAD(P)++H2O⇌α-ketoglutarate+NAD(P)H+NH4++H+
This reaction represents a direct pathway for the liberation of ammonia from an amino acid backbone.
- Tissue-Specific Expression and Activity of GDH
A critical factor determining the fate of glutamate in different tissues is the expression level and activity of GDH. Evidence indicates that GDH expression is significantly lower in skeletal muscle compared to tissues like the liver, kidney, brain, and pancreas, which exhibit high GDH levels.32 Specifically, GLUD1 (the gene encoding the primary GDH isozyme) is reported to be expressed at high levels in liver, brain, pancreas, and kidney, but not in muscle.46 While some GDH activity is detectable in muscle and can be utilized experimentally, for example, to estimate mitochondrial redox state 47, its overall capacity for generating substantial amounts of ammonia via glutamate deamination is limited compared to the liver. The primary physiological site for large-scale oxidative deamination of glutamate via GDH, particularly for the purpose of nitrogen disposal through the urea cycle, is within the mitochondria of liver cells (hepatocytes).41
- Directionality of GDH in Muscle
Given the reversible nature of the GDH reaction and its equilibrium position favoring glutamate formation 46, it is plausible that under conditions where intramuscular ammonia levels might rise (e.g., intense exercise leading to AMP deamination), the GDH reaction in muscle could operate in the reverse direction. In this scenario, GDH would catalyze the reductive amination of α-ketoglutarate, consuming NH4+ and NADH/NADPH to synthesize glutamate.9 This potential role in ammonia fixation, rather than release, further argues against GDH being a significant source of NH4+ in muscle during typical alanine cycle operation.
- Physiological Importance of Low Muscle GDH Activity
The relatively low activity of GDH in skeletal muscle, compared to the high activity of transaminases like BCAT and ALT, is physiologically significant and reflects metabolic specialization.4 The primary objective of nitrogen handling in muscle during catabolic states relevant to the alanine cycle is the safe and efficient export of amino groups to the liver.4 Widespread release of NH4+ via GDH within muscle would be metabolically inefficient and potentially toxic, as muscle lacks the urea cycle necessary for its detoxification.4 Releasing ammonia via GDH only to immediately re-fix it into glutamine using glutamine synthetase (which requires ATP) would constitute a futile cycle compared to the direct transfer of the amino group from glutamate to pyruvate via ALT. Furthermore, high GDH activity operating in the direction of ammonia release would deplete the pool of glutamate generated by BCAT, potentially limiting the rate of alanine synthesis via ALT. Therefore, the low GDH activity in muscle ensures that nitrogen collected from amino acid breakdown is primarily channeled into the non-toxic export forms, alanine and glutamine, maintaining the integrity of the inter-organ nitrogen transport system. This differential GDH expression between muscle and liver underpins their distinct roles: muscle packages and exports nitrogen, while the liver actively deaminates incoming amino acids (often via GDH) to liberate ammonia for urea synthesis.
V. Mechanisms for Handling Ammonia/Ammonium in Muscle
- Alternative Ammonia Sources
While the core reactions of the alanine-glucose cycle (BCAT and ALT transaminations) do not release free ammonia, it is important to acknowledge that NH4+ can be generated within muscle through other metabolic processes. A notable source, particularly during intense exercise when ATP turnover is high, is the purine nucleotide cycle, specifically the deamination of AMP (adenosine monophosphate) to IMP (inosine monophosphate) catalyzed by AMP deaminase, which releases NH4+.11 The ammonia produced via this route is distinct from the nitrogen flow directly involved in alanine synthesis from BCAA-derived glutamate during moderate catabolism or fasting.
- Glutamine Synthetase
Skeletal muscle possesses a highly effective mechanism for scavenging any free ammonia that might arise: the enzyme glutamine synthetase (GS).7 GS catalyzes the ATP-dependent condensation of glutamate with NH4+ to form glutamine:
Glutamate+NH4++ATP→Glutamine+ADP+Pi
This enzyme acts as a crucial ammonia detoxification system within muscle, efficiently incorporating potentially toxic free NH4+ (whether from AMP deaminase or other minor sources) into the non-toxic amino acid glutamine.7
- Alanine and Glutamine as Export Molecules
The products of these nitrogen-handling pathways, alanine (synthesized via ALT) and glutamine (synthesized via GS), serve as the two principal molecules responsible for exporting nitrogen from skeletal muscle.4 Both are non-toxic amino acids readily transported in the bloodstream to the liver, kidneys, and intestine, where their nitrogen can be processed (e.g., urea synthesis in the liver, ammoniagenesis in the kidney) and their carbon skeletons utilized for gluconeogenesis or other metabolic needs. Glutamine is particularly efficient as a nitrogen carrier, transporting two nitrogen atoms per molecule (the α-amino group and the amide group).11
- Absence of Urea Cycle
It is critical to reiterate that skeletal muscle completely lacks the enzymatic machinery of the urea cycle.4 This metabolic limitation underscores the necessity for muscle to export nitrogen in the form of amino acids like alanine and glutamine, rather than releasing free ammonia. The liver is the primary organ equipped for urea synthesis, converting the ammonia delivered from peripheral tissues (or generated locally) into the relatively non-toxic, excretable compound urea.1
- Dual Nitrogen Carriers and Their Significance
The utilization of both alanine and glutamine as major nitrogen export molecules provides metabolic flexibility to the muscle.4 The relative contribution of each pathway can adapt based on the prevailing metabolic conditions. Alanine synthesis via ALT directly links the fate of amino acid nitrogen (collected in glutamate) to the availability of pyruvate, the end product of glycolysis. Thus, conditions favoring glycolysis (e.g., availability of glucose or glycogen) tend to promote alanine release.16 Conversely, glutamine synthesis via GS provides a dedicated route for incorporating free ammonia, which might increase during periods of high energy demand and AMP deamination, into an exportable molecule. This ATP-dependent process 7 ensures efficient ammonia detoxification. Glutamine’s structure, carrying two nitrogen atoms, makes it an efficient shuttle.11 Therefore, muscle employs these two complementary pathways, governed by substrate availability (pyruvate for ALT, NH4+ and ATP for GS) and the overall metabolic state, to effectively manage and export nitrogen derived from amino acid catabolism.
Table 1: Comparison of Key Enzymes in Nitrogen Handling: Muscle vs. Liver
Enzyme Name | Reaction Catalyzed | Primary Location (Tissue) | Relative Activity/Expression (Muscle vs. Liver) | Role in Nitrogen Handling (Muscle) | Role in Nitrogen Handling (Liver) | Key Supporting Information |
Branched-Chain Aminotransferase (BCAT; mainly BCAT2 in muscle) | BCAA + α-KG <=> BCKA + Glu | Muscle > Liver | High in Muscle, Low in Liver | Captures BCAA nitrogen, forming glutamate pool | Minimal role in initial BCAA catabolism | 27 |
Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT; mainly ALT2 in muscle) | Glu + Pyruvate <=> α-KG + Alanine | Muscle, Liver | High in both (ALT2 high in muscle) | Transfers nitrogen from glutamate to pyruvate, forming alanine for export | Transfers nitrogen from incoming alanine to α-KG, forming pyruvate (for GNG) and glutamate | 4 |
Glutamate Dehydrogenase (GDH) | Glu + NAD(P)+ + H2O <=> α-KG + NAD(P)H + NH4+ + H+ | Liver >> Muscle | Low in Muscle, High in Liver | Minor role; potentially fixes NH4+ (reverse reaction) rather than releasing it | Major role in releasing NH4+ from glutamate for urea synthesis; links amino acid and energy metabolism | 11 |
Glutamine Synthetase (GS) | Glu + NH4+ + ATP → Gln + ADP + Pi | Muscle, Liver (periportal) | High in Muscle | Primary mechanism for fixing free NH4+ (e.g., from AMP deaminase) into glutamine for export | Minor role in overall N disposal (periportal cells); primarily exports Gln | 11 |
Urea Cycle Enzymes | Series of reactions converting NH4+ and Aspartate-N into Urea (requires ATP) | Liver only | Absent in Muscle, High in Liver | Absent – necessitates N export via Ala/Gln | Primary pathway for detoxifying NH4+ generated locally or delivered from periphery | 4 |
Abbreviations: α-KG = α-ketoglutarate; BCAA = Branched-Chain Amino Acid; BCKA = Branched-Chain α-Keto Acid; GNG = Gluconeogenesis; Glu = Glutamate; Gln = Glutamine; Ala = Alanine; Pyr = Pyruvate.
VI. Conclusion: Is NH4+ Generated in Muscle During the Alanine-Glucose Cycle?
- Direct Answer Reiteration
In direct response to the query, the biochemical evidence strongly indicates that free ammonium ions (NH4+) are not generated or released as a direct product of the core enzymatic reactions constituting the alanine-glucose cycle within skeletal muscle tissue.4
- Summary of Nitrogen Fate
The fate of nitrogen within muscle during the operation of this cycle primarily involves transamination. Nitrogen derived from the catabolism of amino acids, especially BCAAs, is first transferred to α-ketoglutarate by BCAT, yielding glutamate. Subsequently, the amino group of glutamate is transferred to pyruvate by ALT, forming alanine. This alanine, carrying the nitrogen in its amino group, is then released from the muscle into the circulation. This sequence represents a transfer cascade, meticulously channeling nitrogen into alanine without liberating it as free NH4+.
- Contextualizing Ammonia Handling
While the alanine cycle itself avoids ammonia release, muscle tissue is equipped to handle ammonia generated from other metabolic activities, such as the purine nucleotide cycle (via AMP deaminase) during intense exercise. The primary mechanism for this is glutamine synthetase, which efficiently incorporates free NH4+ into glutamate to form glutamine, another major nitrogen export molecule.7 Furthermore, the characteristically low activity of glutamate dehydrogenase in muscle minimizes the potential for NH4+ release from the central glutamate pool within this tissue.41
- Final Emphasis
The mechanism employed by the alanine-glucose cycle in muscle – relying exclusively on transamination for nitrogen transfer into alanine – is crucial for metabolic homeostasis. It prevents the accumulation of toxic ammonia in a tissue that lacks the capacity for urea synthesis. Concurrently, it ensures the efficient delivery of nitrogen to the liver for safe disposal via the urea cycle, while also providing the liver with pyruvate, a key substrate for gluconeogenesis, thereby supporting blood glucose maintenance during periods of fasting or prolonged exertion.4 This elegant inter-organ pathway underscores the intricate coordination of metabolic processes essential for organismal survival.
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consensus.app
- これらの研究は、筋肉でのアラニン-グルコース回路やアミノ酸代謝の過程でNH4+(アンモニウムイオン)が生成されることを示唆しています。
- 骨格筋細胞におけるアンモニウムイオン(NH4+)の輸送メカニズムについて、直接的な記述はこれらの要約にはありませんが、アミノ酸トランスポーターの役割や調節機構に関する重要な知見が示されています。
- 結論骨格筋細胞では、アミノ酸トランスポーターがアミノ酸の輸送と代謝を調整し、間接的にアンモニウムイオンの生成や排出にも関与している可能性があります。ただし、NH4+の直接的な輸送メカニズムについては、さらなる研究が必要です。
参考
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cahill_cycle
- https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pathway/PathBank:SMP0000127
- J Clin Invest. 2019 Sep 23;129(11):4563–4566. doi: 10.1172/JCI131931 Hungry for your alanine: when liver depends on muscle proteolysis https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6819091/
- https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/pdf/10.5555/20230312849