Dictionary Definition
glutamate n : a salt or ester of glutamic
acid
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
glutamate- Any salt or ester of glutamic acid
Translations
- French: glutamate
Extensive Definition
Glutamic acid (abbreviated as Glu or E; the
abbreviation Glx or Z represents either glutamic acid or glutamine). The carboxylate
anion of glutamic acid is known as glutamate, and this is one
of the 20 proteinogenic amino acids.
It is not among the human essential
amino acids. Its codons are GAA and GAG.
As its name indicates, glutamic acid has a
carboxylic
acid component to its side chain. At
pH7, the amino group
is protonated and one
or both of the carboxylic
groups will be ionized. Hence, the
species has a charge of -1, and is referred to as glutamate. The
pKa
value for glutamic acid is 4.1, which means that below this pH, the
carboxylic acid groups are not ionized in more than half of the
molecules.
History
This compound was discovered in 1908 by the professor Kikunae Ikeda who worked in the Imperial University of Tokyo. He loved seaweed ( Kombu alga, in Japan) which is used like spice in traditional Japanese food. He tried to find the root of this flavour. He discovered that the origin of this taste was the glutamic acid. He isolated crystals of glutamic acid using a Kombu soup (one hundred grams of Kombu has nearly one gram of glutamic acid).Moreover, he discovered that glutamate gave
unique flavour to other foods. He called it "umami" (meaning
"delicious" in Japanese). This distinctive flavor has brought
glutamate the title of "the elusive fifth taste" to join the more
traditional flavors, sweet, salty, sour and bitter.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/05/dining/05glute.html?pagewanted=2&sq=umami&st=nyt&scp=4
Biosynthesis
Function and uses
Metabolism
Glutamate is a key molecule in cellular metabolism. In humans,
dietary proteins are
broken down by digestion into amino acids,
which serves as metabolic fuel for other functional roles in the
body. A key process in amino acid degradation is transamination, in which
the amino group of an amino acid is transferred to an α-ketoacid,
typically catalysed by a transaminase. The reaction
can be generalised as such:
- R1-amino acid + R2-α-ketoacid R1-α-ketoacid + R2-amino acid
A very common α-ketoacid is α-ketoglutarate, an
intermediate in the citric
acid cycle. Transamination of α-ketoglutarate gives glutamate.
The resulting α-ketoacid product is often a useful one as well,
which can contribute as fuel or as a substrate for further
metabolism processes. Examples are as follows:
- Aspartate + α-ketoglutarate oxaloacetate + glutamate
Both pyruvate and oxaloacetate are key components
of cellular metabolism, contributing as substrates or intermediates
in fundamental processes such as glycolysis, gluconeogenesis and also
the citric
acid cycle.
Glutamate also plays an important role in the
body's disposal of excess or waste nitrogen. Glutamate undergoes
deamination, an
oxidative reaction catalysed by glutamate
dehydrogenase, as follows:
Ammonia (as ammonium) is then excreted
predominantly as urea,
synthesised in the liver.
Transamination can thus be linked to deamination, effectively
allowing nitrogen from the amine groups of amino acids to be
removed, via glutamate as an intermediate, and finally excreted
from the body in the form of urea.
Neurotransmitter
Glutamate is the most abundant swift excitatory
neurotransmitter in the
mammalian nervous
system. At chemical
synapses, glutamate is stored in vesicles. Nerve
impulses trigger release of glutamate from the pre-synaptic
cell. In the opposing post-synaptic cell, glutamate
receptors, such as the NMDA
receptor, bind glutamate and are activated. Because of its role
in synaptic
plasticity, it is believed that glutamic acid is involved in
cognitive functions like learning and memory in the brain.
Glutamate
transporters are found in neuronal and glial membranes. They rapidly
remove glutamate from the extracellular space. In
brain injury or disease, they can work in reverse and excess
glutamate can accumulate outside cells. This process causes calcium
ions to enter cells via NMDA
receptor channels, leading to neuronal damage and eventual cell
death, and is called excitotoxicity. The
mechanisms of cell
death include
- Damage to mitochondria from excessively high intracellular Ca2+;
- Glu/Ca2+-mediated promotion of transcription factors for pro-apoptotic genes, or downregulation of transcription factors for anti-apoptotic genes.
Excitotoxicity due to glutamate occurs as part of
the ischemic
cascade and is associated with stroke and diseases like
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, lathyrism, autism, some forms
of mental retardation and Alzheimer's
disease.
Glutamic acid has been implicated in epileptic
seizures. Microinjection
of glutamic acid into neurons produces spontaneous depolarisations around
one second apart, and
this firing pattern is similar to what is known as
paroxysmal depolarizing shift in epileptic attacks. This change
in the resting membrane potential at seizure foci could cause
spontaneous opening of voltage-activated calcium
channels, leading to glutamic acid release and further
depolarization.
Experimental techniques to detect glutamate in
intact cells include using a genetically-engineered nanosensor. The sensor is a
fusion of a glutamate-binding protein and two fluorescent proteins.
When glutamate binds, the fluorescence of the sensor under ultraviolet light changes by
resonance between the two fluorophores. Introduction of the
nanosensor into cells enables optical detection of the glutamate
concentration. Synthetic analogs of glutamic acid that can be
activated by ultraviolet light have also
been described. This method of rapidly uncaging by photostimulation is
useful for mapping the connections between neurons, and
understanding synapse function.
Brain nonsynaptic glutamatergic signaling circuits
Extracellular glutamate in Drosophila brains has
been found to regulate postsynaptic glutamate receptor clustering,
via a process involving receptor desensitization. A gene expressed
in glial
cells actively transports glutamate into the extracellular
space, while in the nucleus
accumbens stimulating group II metabotropic glutamate receptors
was found to reduce extracellular glutamate levels. This raises the
possibility that this extracellular glutamate plays an
"endocrine-like" role as part of a larger homeostatic system.
GABA precursor
Glutamic acid also serves as the precursor for
the synthesis of the inhibitory GABA in GABA-ergic
neurons. This reaction is catalyzed by
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), which is most abundant in
cerebellum and
pancreas.
Stiff-man
syndrome is a neurologic disorder caused by anti-GAD
antibodies, leading to a decrease in GABA synthesis and therefore,
impaired motor function such as muscle stiffness and spasm. Since
the pancreas is also abundant for the enzyme GAD, a direct
immunological destruction occurs in the pancreas and the patients
will have diabetes mellitus.
Flavor enhancer
Free glutamic acid is present in a wide variety
of foods, including soy sauce and
is responsible for one of the five basic tastes
of the human sense of taste (umami). Glutamic acid is often
used as a food
additive and flavour
enhancer in the form of its sodium salt, monosodium
glutamate (MSG).
Nutrient
All meats, poultry, fish, eggs, as well as dairy
products are excellent sources of glutamic acid. Some protein-rich
plant foods also serve as sources.http://www.anyvitamins.com/glutamic-acid-info.htm
Ninety-five percent of the dietary glutamate is metabolized by
intestinal cells in a first pass
Plant growth
Auxigro is a plant
growth preparation that contains 30% glutamic acid.
Production
China-based Fufeng Group Limited is the largest
producer of glutamic acid in the world, with capacity increasing to
300,000 tons at the end of 2006 from 180,000 tons during 2006,
putting them at 25 - 30% of the Chinese market. Meihua is the
second largest Chinese producer. Together, the top five producers
have roughly 50% share in China. Chinese demand is roughly 1.1
million tons per year, while global demand, including China, is 1.7
million tons per year.
Pharmacology
The drug phencyclidine (more
commonly known as PCP) antagonizes
glutamic acid non-competitively at the NMDA receptor. For the same
reasons, sub-anaesthetic doses of Ketamine have
strong dissociative and hallucinogenic effects. Glutamate does not
easily pass the blood
brain barrier, but instead this transport is mediated by a high
affinity transport system . It can also be converted into glutamine.
Role in Sickle-Cell Disease
A point mutation (valine in place of glutamic acid at position 6) in the β-globin chain of hemoglobin forms HbS. This variant of hemoglobin can cause sickle-cell anemia, where the abnormal hemoglobin are prone to polymerization when deoxygenated, thus distorting the erythrocyte which are removed by the spleen or cause microvascular obstruction (ischemic crises). This trait and disease is common in areas with high prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum (one of three Plasmodium species that causes malaria).See also
References
Other
- Nelson DL and Cox MM. Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, 4th edition.
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- Molecular pharmacology of glutamate transporters, EAATs and VGLUTs. Brain Res Brain Res Rev. 2004 Jul; 45(3):250-65.
- Delayed increase of Ca2+ influx elicited by glutamate: role in neuronal death. Mol Pharmacol. 1989 Jul;36(1):106-12;
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glutamate in Bengali: গ্লুটামিক অ্যাসিড
glutamate in Catalan: Àcid glutàmic
glutamate in Czech: Kyselina glutamová
glutamate in Danish: Glutaminsyre
glutamate in German: Glutaminsäure
glutamate in Spanish: Ácido glutámico
glutamate in Esperanto: Glutama acido
glutamate in French: Acide glutamique
glutamate in Korean: 글루탐산
glutamate in Indonesian: Asam glutamat
glutamate in Italian: Acido glutammico
glutamate in Hebrew: חומצה גלוטמית
glutamate in Latvian: Glutamīnskābe
glutamate in Luxembourgish: Glutamat
glutamate in Lithuanian: Glutamo rūgštis
glutamate in Hungarian: Glutaminsav
glutamate in Dutch: Glutaminezuur
glutamate in Japanese: グルタミン酸
glutamate in Polish: Kwas glutaminowy
glutamate in Portuguese: Ácido glutâmico
glutamate in Russian: Глутаминовая кислота
glutamate in Slovak: Kyselina glutámová
glutamate in Finnish: Glutamiinihappo
glutamate in Swedish: Glutaminsyra
glutamate in Thai: กลูตาเมต
glutamate in Turkish: Glutamik asit
glutamate in Ukrainian: Глутамінова
кислота
glutamate in Chinese: 穀氨酸