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Ammonia Metabolism and Toxicity

Ammonia Metabolism and Toxicity

Ammonia Metabolism and Toxicity

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Ammonia Genesis & Shuttle - Toxic Hitchhiker

  • Sources of $NH_3$ (Ammonia):
    • Amino Acid Catabolism: Transamination & Deamination (e.g., Glutamate Dehydrogenase (GDH), amino acid oxidases).
    • Dietary: Purines, pyrimidines, amines.
    • Gut Bacteria: Urease action on urea.
  • Transport (Safe Shuttles):
    • Glutamine: Major, non-toxic. Formed by Glutamine Synthetase. $Glutamate + NH_3 + ATP \rightarrow Glutamine + ADP + Pi$.
    • Alanine: Glucose-Alanine cycle (muscle to liver).
  • Key Enzymes:
    • Glutamate Dehydrogenase (GDH): Central, reversible role in $NH_3$ release/fixation.
    • Glutaminase: Releases $NH_3$ in liver/kidney from glutamine.
    • Glutamine Synthetase: Mops up $NH_3$ (peripheral tissues, brain).
  • Normal blood ammonia: < 50 µmol/L.

⭐ Glutamine, synthesized by glutamine synthetase, is the major non-toxic transport form of ammonia from peripheral tissues to the liver.

Glutamine synthesis and hydrolysis

Urea Cycle - Detox Central

  • Function: Converts toxic ammonia ($NH_4^+$) to urea for excretion. Mainly in liver hepatocytes.
  • Location: First two steps in Mitochondria, subsequent three in Cytosol.
  • The cycle involves five key enzymatic reactions:

    1. $CO_2 + NH_4^+ + 2ATP \rightarrow Carbamoyl~Phosphate$ (CPS-I, Mito).
    2. $Carbamoyl~Phosphate + Ornithine \rightarrow Citrulline$ (OTC, Mito).
    3. $Citrulline + Aspartate + ATP \rightarrow Argininosuccinate$ (ASS, Cyto).
    4. $Argininosuccinate \rightarrow Arginine + Fumarate$ (ASL, Cyto).
    5. $Arginine \rightarrow Urea + Ornithine$ (Arginase, Cyto).
  • Regulation:

    • CPS-I Activation: N-Acetylglutamate (NAG) is the primary allosteric activator.
    • Substrate Availability: Increased ammonia or ornithine levels boost cycle rate.
    • Enzyme Induction: Synthesis of urea cycle enzymes ↑ with high protein intake or prolonged starvation.
  • Energetics: Consumes 3 ATP equivalents per urea molecule (2 ATP by CPS-I; ATP to AMP+PPi by ASS, equals 2 ATP).

  • 📌 Mnemonic: Ordinarily, Careless Crappers Are Also Frivolous About Urination (Ornithine, Carbamoyl Phosphate, Citrulline, Aspartate, Argininosuccinate, Fumarate, Arginine, Urea).

Urea Cycle Diagram

⭐ Carbamoyl Phosphate Synthetase I (CPS-I) is the rate-limiting enzyme of the urea cycle, located in the mitochondria, and is allosterically activated by N-Acetylglutamate (NAG).

Ammonia Toxicity & Hyperammonemia - Brain Under Siege

  • Mechanisms (Brain Most Susceptible):
    • ↓ α-ketoglutarate → ↓ TCA cycle, ↓ ATP.
    • ↑ Glutamine (astrocytes) → osmotic imbalance, cerebral edema.
    • Altered neurotransmission (↑ GABA, ↓ glutamate); membrane potential changes.
  • Clinical Manifestations:
    • Neuro: Hepatic encephalopathy (confusion, asterixis, coma), seizures, ataxia.
    • Infants/children: Vomiting, lethargy, irritability, poor feeding, developmental delay, hyperventilation.
  • Causes:
    • Acquired: Liver failure (cirrhosis, hepatitis, Reye's syndrome).
    • Hereditary: Urea Cycle Disorders (UCDs) (e.g., OTC deficiency - X-linked; CPS-I deficiency), organic acidemias.
  • Diagnosis:
    • ↑ Plasma $NH_3$: Adults > 50-60 µmol/L; Neonates > 100-150 µmol/L.
    • Liver function tests (LFTs).
    • UCD tests: Plasma amino acids, urine orotic acid (↑ in OTC deficiency), enzyme assays.
  • Management Principles:
    • Acute:
      • ↓ $NH_3$ production: Stop protein, Rifaximin, Lactulose (traps $NH_3$).
      • ↑ $NH_3$ removal: IV Na Benzoate/Phenylacetate/Phenylbutyrate, dialysis.
      • IV glucose (prevents catabolism).
    • Chronic:
      • Diet: Protein restriction, essential AA supplements.
      • Supplements: L-arginine/L-citrulline.
      • Liver transplant (severe UCDs). Ammonia toxicity effects on brain cells

⭐ Ornithine Transcarbamoylase (OTC) deficiency is the most common urea cycle disorder, inherited as an X-linked recessive trait, and often presents with elevated urinary orotic acid.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • The urea cycle, primarily in the liver, converts toxic ammonia to urea.
  • Hyperammonemia leads to hepatic encephalopathy and cerebral edema.
  • Carbamoyl Phosphate Synthetase I (CPS-I) is the rate-limiting enzyme of the urea cycle.
  • Ornithine Transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency is the most common X-linked urea cycle disorder.
  • Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and glutamine synthetase trap ammonia, forming glutamate and glutamine.
  • Treatment aims to reduce ammonia: lactulose, antibiotics (e.g., rifaximin), protein restriction.

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