Repository logo
 

Metabolite Exchange between Mammalian Organs Quantified in Pigs

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Abstract

Mammalian organs continually exchange metabolites via circulation, but systems-level analysis of this shuttling process is lacking. Here we compared, in fasted pigs, metabolite concentrations in arterial blood versus draining venous blood from 11 organs. Greater than 90% of metabolites showed arterial-venous differences across at least one organ. Surprisingly, the liver and kidneys released not only glucose but also amino acids, both of which were consumed primarily by the intestine and pancreas. The liver and kidneys exhibited additional unexpected activities: liver preferentially burned unsaturated over more atherogenic saturated fatty acids, while the kidneys were unique in burning circulating citrate and net oxidizing lactate to pyruvate, thereby contributing to circulating redox homeostasis. Furthermore, we observed more than 700 other cases of tissue-specific metabolite production or consumption, such as release of nucleotides by the spleen and TCA intermediates by pancreas. These data constitute a high-value resource, providing quantitative atlas of inter-organ metabolite exchange

Description

Keywords

Journal Title

Cell Metabolism

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1550-4131

Volume Title

30

Publisher

Cell Press
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12022/6)