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Metabolic Flux Measurements Across Portal Drained Viscera, Liver, Kidney and Hindquarter in Mice

Overview
Journal Lab Anim
Date 2001 Feb 24
PMID 11201286
Citations 8
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Abstract

A method was developed to measure metabolic fluxes across either portally-drained viscera (PDV) and liver or kidney and hindquarter (HQ) in anesthetized mice. The method includes a primed-constant infusion of ketamine-medetomidine anaesthesia to stabilize the mice for the surgical procedures. For measurement of metabolic fluxes across PDV and liver, blood sampling catheters were inserted in the carotid artery, portal vein and hepatic vein and infusion catheters in the jugular vein and mesenteric vein. For measurement of metabolic flux across kidney and HQ, blood sampling catheters were inserted in the carotid artery, renal vein and caval vein and infusion catheters in the jugular vein and abdominal aorta. 14C-PAH was infused to enable plasma flow measurement using an indicator dilution method. In addition, we developed a blood sampling procedure without waste of blood. We measured plasma flow and metabolic fluxes across PDV, liver, kidney and HQ. Mean plasma flow in post-absorptive mice was: PDV: 0.9+/-0.2, liver: 1.2+/-0.3, kidney: 1.0+/-0.1, HQ: 1.1+/-0.3 ml/10 g body weight (b.w.)/min. Significant glutamine release by the HQ and uptake of glutamine by the kidney and PDV was observed. In PDV, citrulline is produced from glutamine and is in turn used by the kidney for the production of arginine. In conclusion, the described model enables measurement of metabolic fluxes across PDV, liver, kidney and HQ in mice. The availability of such a small animal model allows the potential for measuring metabolic parameters in transgenic and knockout mice, and therefore may lead to an important refinement in metabolic research.

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