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Query: UMLS:C0003969 (
vitamin C deficiency
)
625
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It was shown that carnitine deficiency and an impairment of the conversion of
butyrobetaine
into carnitine develops not only in ascorbic acid-deficient guinea-pigs but also in partially starved animals. We propose that the same mechanism, an absolute or relative
ascorbic acid deficiency
, is operating in both nutritional states. An increased urinary excretion greatly contributes to the development of carnitine deficiency in guinea-pigs, both in
ascorbic acid deficiency
and starvation. With respect to the greatly increased excretion, guinea-pig carnitine deficiency resembles the human disorder and may serve as model for it.
...
PMID:Role of the liver in carnitine metabolism: the mechanism of development of carnitine-deficient status in guinea-pigs. 238 Jun 69
Experimental
vitamin C deficiency
in guinea pigs is associated with low carnitine concentrations in blood and some tissues. Ascorbic acid is a cofactor for two enzymes in the pathway of carnitine biosynthesis. The effect of experimental
vitamin C deficiency
on the ability of guinea pigs to synthesize carnitine was in animals fed a vitamin C-deficient diet for 28 days. On days 19 to 28, supplements (0.5 mmol.kg body weight-1.d-1) of the carnitine precursors epsilon-N-trimethyllysine or gamma-
butyrobetaine
were administered orally. Ascorbate-supplemented, ascorbate-deficient, and pair-fed (to ascorbate-deficient) animals showed an increase in the rate of carnitine biosynthesis (as estimated from measured rates of carnitine excretion) of 32 to 40 mumol.kg body weight-1.d-1 following supplementation with epsilon-N-trimethyllysine. Likewise, animals in each experimental group showed an increase in the rate of carnitine biosynthesis of 41 to 50 mumol.kg body weight-1.d-1 after supplementation with gamma-
butyrobetaine
. These results indicate that
scorbutic
guinea pigs are able to synthesize carnitine at a normal or above-normal rate. For guinea pigs not given a carnitine precursor supplement, rates of free and total carnitine excretion for ascorbate-deficient (but not pair-fed) animals were threefold higher than for ascorbate-supplemented animals during days 19 to 28 of the feeding regimen. Thus, carnitine depletion in
vitamin C deficiency
likely is due to excessive urinary excretion of carnitine and not to a decreased rate of carnitine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:The ability of guinea pigs to synthesize carnitine at a normal rate from epsilon-N-trimethyllysine or gamma-butyrobetaine in vivo is not compromised by experimental vitamin C deficiency. 775 11