A sparing effect by formate or methanol on the impairment of creatine metabolism in folic acid deficiency

Fatterpaker, Prema ; Marfatia, Urmila ; Sreenivasan, A. (1952) A sparing effect by formate or methanol on the impairment of creatine metabolism in folic acid deficiency Nature, 170 (4334). pp. 894-895. ISSN 0028-0836

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Official URL: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v170/n4334/ab...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/170894b0

Abstract

In a recent communication we reported on an involvement of dietary folic acid and vitamin B12 in creatine metabolism. The observations suggested that deficiencies of these vitamins were interfering with the economy of labile methyl groups. It has been established that the methyl groups of choline and methionine may undergo oxidative degradation to formate and that the utilization of such metabolically derived formate for serine synthesis and possibly in other single-carbon addition reactions such as nucleic acid formation involves mediation of folic acid; this vitamin is also directly concerned with formate production from glycine. It seemed possible, therefore, that the influence of folic acid on creatine formation might in part at least be due to a check on the drain of methyl to formate resulting in its increased availability for transmethylations. A direct proof of this postulate was sought in the studies reported here on the influence by mass effect of administered formate on in vitro and in vivo creatine synthesis in mice suffering from folic-acid deficiency and in normal mice. Methanol was also used in place of formate since it functions better in the reverse step of formate reduction to methyl.

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