Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Metabolism and Nutrition of L-Glutamate and L-Glutamine in Ruminants

Guoyao Wu; Fuller W. Bazer; Gregory A. Johnson; M. Carey Satterfield; Shannon E. Washburn

Animals · 2024

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Summary

Although both L-glutamate (Glu) and L-glutamine (Gln) have long been considered nutritionally nonessential in ruminants, these two amino acids have enormous nutritional and physiological importance. Results of recent studies revealed that extracellular Gln is extensively degraded by ruminal microbes, but extracellular Glu undergoes little catabolism by these cells due to the near absence of its uptake. Ruminal bacteria hydrolyze Gln to Glu plus ammonia and, intracellularly, use both amino acids for protein synthesis. Microbial proteins and dietary Glu enter the small intestine in ruminants. Both Glu and Gln are the major metabolic fuels and building blocks of proteins, as well as substrates for the syntheses of glutathione and amino acids (alanine, ornithine, citrulline, arginine, proline,

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.3390/ani14121788
Catalogue ID
NRmo9zxr64-089
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