|
Pyruvate exerts several effects that could prove beneficial
to humans, including improved function of failing heart,
enhanced effectiveness of insulin to control blood sugar
levels, reduction in amount of fat tissue, and increased
lean muscle mass. These effects of pyruvate could assist
in the treatment of congestive heart failure, diabetes,
and obesity and thus favorably impact the lives of millions
of Americans, especially if pyruvate could be conveniently
administered as a dietary supplement. Unfortunately, pyruvate
consumed orally does not reach the organs it could potentially
benefit. To enter the systemic bloodstream, substances
consumed in the diet must be absorbed from the gut by special
cells that line the gut and must pass through the liver,
a metabolically active organ that heavily modifies dietary
substances. Both the gut lining and liver can transform
pyruvate to other compounds that lack its beneficial properties.
For dietary pyruvate to be an effective treatment, it must
pass through the gut lining and liver without being metabolized.
Our objective is to protect pyruvate from gut and liver
metabolism, making it accessible to heart, brain and other
vital organs. This aim will be accomplished by chemically
linking pyruvate to amino acids, the building blocks of
proteins, to form pyruvate-amino acid conjugates and administering
these novel compounds to rats and guinea-pigs in the diet.
Co-investigator John Ivy has demonstrated that such chemical
modification enables pyruvate to traverse the gut and liver
and enter the systemic bloodstream intact. Heart, muscle
and brain cells take up the pyruvate-amino acid compound
and break the chemical link between pyruvate and amino-acid
to release pyruvate within the cells. Thus, the amino acid
will serve to shield pyruvate from metabolism until it reaches
the target organs where it can exert its beneficial effects.
In this investigation, novel chemical derivatives of pyruvate
will be developed that enable pyruvate to traverse the metabolic
barriers imposed by the intestinal lining and liver and
thereby gain access to vital organs. The ability of daily
dietary consumption of pyruvate-amino acid conjugates to
produce beneficial effects on the body, including metabolic
protection of the heart, reduction of fat tissue, increased
lean muscle mass, and augmentation of insulin control of
blood sugar will be characterized. It is anticipated that
the novel compounds developed in this investigation could
potentially benefit millions of people suffering from heart
disease, diabetes and obesity.
©
Cardiovascular Research Institute, February 2000
An Institute of Discovery at the University of North Texas
Health Science Center at Fort Worth
|