Abstract: | The accumulation of labelled leucine, isoleucine and valine by cerebral slices of developing and adult rats was studied. The accumulation increased with age by 15–25%. It was strongly (from 52 to 86%) inhibited by a 100-fold excess of phenylalanine, tryptophan and another branched-chain amino acid, but moderately activated by GABA and glutamate. The inhibitions evoked by leucine and isoleucine were slightly stronger in young than in adult rats. The corresponding 2-oxoacid analogs of leucine, isoleucine and valine were also inhibitory but less effective. The 30-min accumulation of 3H-labelled branched-chain amino acids was ostensibly higher than the increase in their total concentrations in incubated slices, which apparently bespeaks lively homoexchange of endogenous intracellular and labelled extracellular amino acids. |