Excess of taurine supplementation in rat: effects on GABA-related amino acids in developing nervous tissues.

1992 
: The effects of taurine supplementation on GABA-related amino acid homeostasis in developing nervous tissues of suckling rats were studied. In the first two weeks of postnatal growth, cerebral cortex and cerebellum appear more accessible to taurine supplementation in comparison to retina; in addition, different changes in excitatory/inhibitory amino acids were observed. After the 5th day of life, in the retina and cerebellum of taurine-supplemented pups a decrease in GABA levels was found; in contrast, in cerebral cortex GABA content significantly increased throughout 20 days of postnatal growth. In all nervous tissues studied (except for cerebellum) glutamine concentration increased at the 5th day; then in cerebellum and in retina, but not in cerebral cortex, a significant decrease until the 20th day occurred. Furthermore, in cerebellum and retina taurine supplementation decreased glutamate levels, in comparison to controls, at the 10th and until the 20th day of postnatal life, respectively, whereas in cerebral cortex an increase in glutamate level was observed only at the 5th day. In conclusion, taurine supplementation, in excess to the usual amount from the mother's milk, affected the glutamate compartments in various cell types. The changes in GABA-related amino acid concentrations in cerebral cortex, cerebellum, and retina may depend on the different pattern of the metabolic processes at different maturative stages.
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