Amino acids.
Publisher:
Springer-Verlag,
Frequency: Monthly, 2012-
Country: Austria
Language: English
Start Year:1991 -
ISSN:
0939-4451 (Print)
1438-2199 (Electronic)
0939-4451 (Linking)
1438-2199 (Electronic)
0939-4451 (Linking)
Impact Factor
3.5
2022
| NLM ID: | 9200312 |
| (DNLM): | SR0071696(s) |
| (OCoLC): | 25007247 |
| Coden: | AACIE6 |
| Classification: | W1 AM884N |
Evidence that human and equine erythrocytes could have significant roles in the transport and delivery of amino acids to organs and tissues. Erythrocytes have a well-defined role in the gaseous exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the mammalian body. The erythrocytes can contain more than half of the free amino acids present in whole blood. Based on measures showing that venous erythrocyte levels of amino acids are much less than arterial erythrocyte levels, it has previously been proposed that erythrocytes also play a role in the delivery of amino acids to tissues in the body. This role has been dismissed because it has been assumed that to act as an amino acid transport vehicle, the erythrocytes should release their entire a...
Optimizing human in vivo dosing and delivery of β-alanine supplements for muscle carnosine synthesis. Interest into the effects of carnosine on cellular metabolism is rapidly expanding. The first study to demonstrate in humans that chronic β-alanine (BA) supplementation (~3-6 g BA/day for ~4 weeks) can result in significantly augmented muscle carnosine concentrations (>50%) was only recently published. BA supplementation is potentially poised for application beyond the niche exercise and performance-enhancement field and into other more clinical populations. When examining all BA supplementation studies that directly measure muscle carnosine (n=8), there is a significant linear correlation...
Effect of regular training on the myocardial and plasma concentrations of taurine and alpha-amino acids in thoroughbred horses. Exercise induces significant changes in the free intracellular amino acid pool in skeletal muscle but little is known of whether such changes also occur in cardiac muscle. In this study the effect of regular exercise on the size and the constituents of the free amino acid pool in the hearts and in the plasma of thoroughbred horses was investigated. The total free intracellular amino acid pool in the hearts of control horses was 30.9 +/- 1.2 mumol/g wet weight (n = 6). Glutamine but not taurine was present at the highest concentration (13.5 +/- 0.9 and 7.7 +/- 0.69 mumol/g wet weight for glutam...