Zieve L
J Am Coll Nutr. 1986;5(2):167-76. doi: 10.1080/07315724.1986.10720123.
Relative deficiencies of ornithine or arginine occur in the presence of excessive ammonia, excessive lysine, growth, pregnancy, trauma, or protein deficiency and malnutrition. Ammonia excess may occur in the presence of a normal liver when amino acid mixtures lacking ornithine, arginine, or citrulline are infused; when specific amino acids such as glycine are injected; when ammonium salts, urea, or urease are injected; or when the gastrointestinal tract contains an excess of protein, urea, or NH4+, as occurs after a gastrointestinal hemorrhage. In these states, ornithine is often rate-limiting for urea cycle function. Ornithine is also rate-limiting when ammonia excess occurs in the presence of hepatic failure. In three of the inherited urea cycle disorders, ornithine insufficiency and ammonia excess also occur. These disorders are citrullinemia, argininosuccinic aciduria, and argininemia. In the presence of excessive lysine the availability of arginine is reduced and the formation of ornithine is decreased in the liver; urea synthesis is reduced, but orotic acid synthesis is increased, and orotic aciduria results as carbamyl phosphate is directed toward the pyrimidine pathway. Hereditary lysinuric protein intolerance results in ornithine depletion, hyperammonemia, and orotic acid uria. Optimal growth in several species of animals requires 0.4-1.0% arginine in the diet. Diets deficient in arginine are associated with poor wound healing as well as stunted growth. The measurement of orotic acid excretion has been a convenient indicator of insufficiency of ornithine or arginine during growth or pregnancy in animals and should prove useful in assessing the requirement for arginine after trauma. Normal human pregnancy is associated with low-grade orotic aciduria. Protein deficiency and malnutrition increase the vulnerability of the animal or child to ammonia toxicity. This is presumably due to insufficient ornithine for normal urea cycle responsiveness.
在存在过量氨、过量赖氨酸、生长、妊娠、创伤或蛋白质缺乏及营养不良的情况下,会出现鸟氨酸或精氨酸相对缺乏。当输注缺乏鸟氨酸、精氨酸或瓜氨酸的氨基酸混合物时;当注射特定氨基酸如甘氨酸时;当注射铵盐、尿素或脲酶时;或当胃肠道含有过量蛋白质、尿素或NH4 +时(如胃肠道出血后),即使肝脏正常也可能出现氨过量。在这些状态下,鸟氨酸通常是尿素循环功能的限速因素。当肝功能衰竭时出现氨过量,鸟氨酸同样是限速因素。在三种遗传性尿素循环障碍中,也会出现鸟氨酸不足和氨过量。这些疾病是瓜氨酸血症、精氨琥珀酸尿症和精氨酸血症。在存在过量赖氨酸的情况下,精氨酸的可用性降低,肝脏中鸟氨酸的形成减少;尿素合成减少,但乳清酸合成增加,由于氨基甲酰磷酸转向嘧啶途径而导致乳清酸尿。遗传性赖氨酸尿蛋白不耐受会导致鸟氨酸耗竭、高氨血症和乳清酸尿。几种动物的最佳生长需要饮食中含有0.4 - 1.0%的精氨酸。缺乏精氨酸的饮食与伤口愈合不良以及生长发育迟缓有关。测量乳清酸排泄一直是评估动物生长或妊娠期间鸟氨酸或精氨酸不足的便捷指标,并且应该有助于评估创伤后对精氨酸的需求。正常人类妊娠与轻度乳清酸尿有关。蛋白质缺乏和营养不良会增加动物或儿童对氨毒性的易感性。这可能是由于鸟氨酸不足,无法对尿素循环做出正常反应。