Volume 15, Numbers 1-2, 161-177, DOI: 10.1007/BF01345289

Is there a correlation between taurine levels and xenobioticinduced perturbations in protein synthesis?: A study with tetracycline in rats

Catherine Waterfield, D. S. Asker, S. Paten and J. A. Timbrell

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Abstract

Changes in urinary levels of taurine have been reported in rats following treatment with various xenobiotics including those which alter protein synthesis and/or are hepatotoxic. This paper reports on the time course of the urinary elevation of taurine following treatment of rats with tetracycline (50, 150 and 200mg.kg-1). Maximum taurine excretion occurred 8–12h following dosing. Serum albumin and total protein were significantly lower after 24h (200mg.kg-1). The increase in urinary taurine was dose-related and reflected in the raised serum levels of taurine 24h after dosing. Serum and urinary protein and [3H]-leucine incorporation into acid precipitable protein in liver and muscle were reduced by tetracycline (100, 150 and 200mg.kg-1) 10h after dosing. The reduction in protein synthesis was correlated with increased urinary and serum levels of taurine at 10h. The use of taurine as a non-invasive marker of protein synthesis is discussed.

Keywords  Amino acids - Taurine - Protein synthesis - Urinary marker - Tetracycline - Glutathione

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