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CHOLINE AND ACETYLCHOLINE IN RATS: EFFECT OF DIETARY CHOLINE
Author(s) -
Haubrich D. R.,
Wang Pauline F. L.,
Chippendale T.,
Proctor Elizabeth
Publication year - 1976
Publication title -
journal of neurochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.75
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 1471-4159
pISSN - 0022-3042
DOI - 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1976.tb02608.x
Subject(s) - choline , endocrinology , medicine , phosphorylcholine , acetylcholine , chemistry , choline chloride , metabolism , biology , biochemistry
– The concentration of free choline in peripheral tissues (duodenum, heart, kidney, liver, stomach and plasma) of rats was found to be related to the amount of free choline in the diet. Under steady‐state conditions, the concentration of free choline in plasma varied from a minimum of approx 6 nmol/ml (in rats fed a choline‐deficient diet) to a maximum value not exceeding 21 nmol/ml. The concentration of plasma choline was elevated above 21 nmol/ml for a short time after parenteral administration of choline chloride or one of its precursors (CDP choline or phosphorylcholine), but was not affected by stress, endocrine manipulations, drug treatments or the time of day when rats were killed. The metabolism of intravenously administered [methyl‐ 3 H] choline was accelerated in peripheral tissues (except plasma) of choline‐deficient rats, indicating that free choline is not preserved during choline deficiency by a reduction in its rate of turnover. Furthermore, the decrease in concentration of plasma choline that occurred in rats fed a choline‐deficient diet was prevented by addition of deanol (dimethylaminoethanol) to the diet. These results indicate that free choline in peripheral tissues of rats is derived from both free choline in the diet, and from precursors of choline present within the diet. In contrast to the effects in peripheral tissues, the concentration of free choline in brain was not reduced by dietary deprivation of free choline; however, the increase in free choline that occurred when rats were decapitated was reduced in brains by deficiency of choline, suggesting a decrease in the concentration of esterified forms of cerebral choline. The concentration of acetylcholine was not reduced in the brain, duodenum, heart, kidney or stomach of 21‐week old rats raised from birth on a choline‐deficient diet, in the duodenum of rats given a choline‐deficient diet for 1, 5 or 11 days, or in brains of rats deprived of free choline for 1 or 11 days. However, the rate of in vivo synthesis of ACh from [methyl‐ 3 H]choline was accelerated in cholinergic tissues that were depleted of free choline (i.e. duodenum, heart and stomach).