Indole Amines and Amino Acids in Various Brain Regions after Infusion of Branched Chain Amino Acids into Hepatectomized Rats

Abstract
This study was designed to determine regional changes of amino acids and indole amines in the brain and possible interactions between amino acids and indole amines 18 h after hepatectomy in rats. Hepatectomy and glucose infusion alone resulted in a profound increase of most large neutral amino acids (LNAA) in plasma and in the brain except for the branched-chain amino acids (BCAA), which maintained normal or somewhat lower values in plasma. Hepatectomy and infusion of glucose combined with BCAA sharply reduced the plasma and brain amino acid concentrations of other LNAA. Simultaneously the concentrations of serotonin and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid were decreased in all brain regions. In both groups of hepatectomized rats there were regional variations of the amino acid and the indole amine concentrations in the brain, but the response to BCAA infusion was generally the same in all brain regions. No difference in survival between the 2 groups could be found.