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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 20, 1305-1312, Copyright © 1974 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry
1 Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Connecticut
School of Medicine, Farmington, Conn. 06032.
Amino acids were measured by ion-exchange liquid
chromatography in sweat samples obtained from 22
healthy men during sauna bathing. Amino acids were
also measured in plasma (collected before breakfast)
and urine (24-h collections) from the same subjects.
Serine, ornithine, citrulline, and aspartic acid were present in sweat in mean concentrations >10-fold their
mean concentrations in plasma. In contrast, glutamine,
cystine,
-aminobutyric acid, and
-aminoadipic acid
were present in sweat in mean concentrations that
were <0.2 times their mean concentrations in plasma.
Concentrations of specific amino acids in sweat bore no
apparent relationship to their concentrations in urine.
Thus, citrulline was abundant in sweat, whereas only
traces of citrulline were found in urine. Conversely, glutamine, taurine, cystine, and several other amino acids
were abundant in urine but were present in very low or
undetectable concentrations in sweat samples. This
study indicates that the physiological mechanisms controlling excretion of amino acids in sweat differ fundamentally from those regulating renal excretion of amino
acids.
Submitted on July 5, 1974
Accepted on July 25, 1974
The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:
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R. I. Sarker and P. C. Maloney Na+/Glutamine (Asparagine) Cotransport by Staphylococcus lugdunensis and Corynebacterium amycolatum J. Bacteriol., February 1, 2001; 183(3): 1110 - 1112. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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