Abstract

Fetal and maternal plasma were assayed for the concentration of free leucine, acid-insoluble radioactivity and acid-soluble radioactivity at intervals after an intravenous bolus injection of [ 3H]leucine into anaesthetized pregnant rats at 17.5 days post-conception. The concentrations of total free leucine and of free [ 3H]leucine in maternal and fetal plasma were effectively unchanged from 5 to 180 min post-injection. Plasma free leucine concentrations in the fetus were five times those in the mother. The concentration of free [ 3H]leucine in fetal plasma was similar to that in maternal plasma. Thus the specific radioactivity of free leucine in fetal plasma is substantially lower than that in maternal plasma, indicating that a significant portion of the free leucine in plasma of the 17.5-day rat fetus comes from a source other than the free leucine in the maternal plasma. The data are consistent with a major contribution of amino acids coming from the degradation of extraembryonic protein in the yolk sac. Other possible sources of unlabelled leucine are discussed.

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