Homocysteine export from cells cultured in the presence of physiological or superfluous levels of methionine: Methionine loading of non-transformed, transformed, proliferating, and quiescent cells in culture
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Cellular Physiology
- Vol. 146 (1) , 52-62
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1041460108
Abstract
Determination of the transient increase in plasma homocysteine following administration of excess methionine is an established procedure for the diagnosis of defects in homocysteine metabolism in patients. This so‐called methionine loading test has been used for 25 years, but the knowledge of the response of various cell types to excess methionine is limited. In the present paper we investigated homocysteine export from various cell types cultured in the presence of increasing concentrations (15–1,000 μM) of methionine. For comparison of homocysteine export, the export rates per million cells were plotted versus cell density for proliferating cells, and versus time for quiescent cells. The homocysteine export from growing cells was greatest during early to mid‐exponential growth phase, and then decreased as a function of cell density. The export rate was higher from phytohemagglutinin‐stimulated than non‐stimulated lymphocytes, and higher from proliferating than from quiescent fibroblasts. The hepatocytes showed highest export rate among the cell types investigated. The enhancement of homocysteine export by excess methionine ranged from no stimulation to marked enhancement, depending on cell type investigated, and three different response patterns could be distinguished: (1) quiescent fibroblasts and growing murine lymphoma cell showed no significant increase in homocysteine export following methionine loading; export from human lymphocytes was only slightly enhanced in the presence of excess methionine; (2) the homocysteine export from proliferating hepatoma cells and benign and transformed fibroblasts was stimulated three to eightfold by increasing the methionine concentration in the medium from 15 to 1,000 μM; and (3) the response to methionine loading was particularly increased (about 15‐fold) in non‐transformed primary hepatocytes in stationary culture. The results outline a potentially useful procedure for the comparison of homocysteine export during cell growth in the presence of various concentrations of methionine. The results are discussed in relation to the special feature of homocysteine metabolism in various cell types and tissues including liver, and to the possible source of plasma homocysteine following methionine loading in vivo.Keywords
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