A deuterium surface coil NMR study of the metabolism of D-methionine in the liver of the anesthetized rat

Abstract
The hepatic metabolism of deuteriated D-methionine has been studied in the intact, anesthetized rat using 2H NMR spectroscopy. The rate of formation of the principal labeled metabolite, [methyl-2H3]sarcosine, from the D-[methyl-2H3]methionine precursor was found to be as rapid as the rate observed previously in NMR studies of the hepatic metabolism of L-methionine. Similarly, rates of clearance of labeled methionine from the liver, formation of N-trimethyl-labeled metabolites, and labeling of HDO pool were all found to be similar to the rates observed in the L-methionine studies. In contrast, all of these metabolic transformations are strongly inhibited by pretreatment of the rats with sodium benzoate, an inhibitor of D-amino acid oxidase. In vivo 2H NMR studies of sodium benzoate treated rats given L-[methyl-2H3]-methionine exhibit a much more rapid formation of [methyl-2H3]sarcosine than rats given the D enantiomer, consistent with the expectation that the sodium benzoate does not interfere with either the formation of S-adenosylmethionine or the subsequent transmethylation of glycine. However, the rates of methionine clearance and formation of deuteriated water are markedly reduced in this study relative to rats receiving the labeled D- or L-methionine without sodium benzoate pretreatment. These results indicate that subsequent to the initial oxidative deamination of the labeled D-methionine, the reamination to give L-methionine is rapid compared with the further degradation of the .alpha.-keto acid. Thus, the results are consistent with a dominant contribution of the glycine/sarcosine shuttle to the metabolism of excess D- or L-methionine.