Abstract

After male rats of the Sprague Dawley strain, 5 weeks old, were fed a 20% casein diet with or without 0.5% nicotinamide for 13 days, 180 mg/kg body weight of alloxan was injected in- traperitoneally into the rats. The rats were kept for 18 days with the same diet. The level of blood glucose was increased 6-fold in the group on a 20% casein diet by the injection of alloxan, while there was only a 2-foid increase in the group on a nicotinamide-containing diet and the decreased body weight was also lower in the group on the nicotinamide diet than the group on the casein diet. The body weight was indirectly related to the concentration of blood glucose. A marked increase was observed in the activities of tryptophan oxygenase, aminocarboxymuconate-semialdehyde decarboxylase, and nicotinamide methyltransferase upon the injection of alloxan with both diets; on the other hand, the activities of kynureninase and NAD+ synthetase were decreased by the injection of alloxan. The activity of kynurenine aminotransferase increased in the group on the 20% casein diet by the injection of alloxan, while in the group on the nicotinamide-containing diet its activity was not increased by the injection. These changes in the above enzyme activities mean that the conversion ratio from tryptophan to niacin is lower in the alloxan diabetic rat than normal rat. It was found that the activities of tryptophan oxygenase, aminocarboxymuconate-semialdehyde decarboxylase, and nicotinamide methyltransferase were directly related to the concentration of blood glucose, and that the activities of kynureninase and NAD+ synthetase were inversely related. There was no difference in the activities of 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid oxygenase and nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase upon the injection of alloxan with both diets.

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