Alanine transaminase

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abbr. (in clinical biochemistry): ALT; EC 2.6.1.2; systematic name: l-alanine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase; other names: glutamic-pyruvic transaminase; glutamic-alanine transaminase. An enzyme that catalyses the reversible reaction:
l-alanine + 2-oxoglutarate = pyruvate + l-glutamate.
Widely distributed in all tissues and organisms, it is a pyridoxal-phosphate enzyme. In clinical chemistry its assay alongside aspartate transaminase (AST), normally present in plasma in higher concentrations, may be useful as an indicator of liver damage, as levels of ALT are higher in liver than those of AST, in contrast to other tissues. In hepatitis, plasma levels of ALT may exceed those of AST.

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Saunders Veterinary Dictionary:

alanine aminotransferase

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An enzyme that catalyzes the reversible transfer of an amino group in the reaction:
$$\hbox{alanine + 2-oxoglutarate \leftrightharpoonsarrow\,\! pyruvate + glutamate}$$
requiring the coenzyme pyridoxal phosphate. Abbreviated ALT. It is present in high concentrations in hepatocytes of dogs, cats and humans. The serum concentration is elevated, especially when there is acute damage to liver cells, as in viral or toxic hepatitis, and obstructive jaundice. Significant elevation of the serum levels of ALT is a specific indicator of liver damage only in small animals and primates. Called also glutamic–pyruvic transaminase (GPT).

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Alanine transaminase

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glutamic-pyruvate transaminase
Identifiers
Symbol GPT
Entrez 2875
HUGO 4552
OMIM 138200
RefSeq NM_005309
UniProt P24298
Other data
EC number 2.6.1.2
Locus Chr. 8 q24.2-qter
Alanine transaminase
Identifiers
EC number 2.6.1.2
CAS number 9000-86-6
Databases
IntEnz IntEnz view
BRENDA BRENDA entry
ExPASy NiceZyme view
KEGG KEGG entry
MetaCyc metabolic pathway
PRIAM profile
PDB structures RCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Gene Ontology AmiGO / EGO

Alanine transaminase or ALT is a transaminase enzyme (EC 2.6.1.2). It is also called serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) or alanine aminotransferase (ALAT).

ALT is found in serum and in various bodily tissues, but is most commonly associated with the liver. It catalyzes the two parts of the alanine cycle.

Contents

Function

It catalyzes the transfer of an amino group from alanine to α-ketoglutarate, the products of this reversible transamination reaction being pyruvate and glutamate.

glutamate + pyruvate α-ketoglutarate + alanine
Alanine transaminase

Clinical significance

It is commonly measured clinically as a part of a diagnostic evaluation of hepatocellular injury, to determine liver health. When used in diagnostics, it is almost always measured in international units/liter (U/L).[1][2] While sources vary on specific normal range values for patients, 10-40 U/L is the standard normal range for experimental studies.[1] Alanine transaminase shows a marked diurnal variation.

Elevated levels

Patient type Reference ranges[3]
Female 5–38 IU/L
Male 10–50 IU/L

Significantly elevated levels of ALT(SGPT) often suggest the existence of other medical problems such as viral hepatitis, diabetes, congestive heart failure, liver damage, bile duct problems, infectious mononucleosis, or myopathy. For this reason, ALT is commonly used as a way of screening for liver problems. Elevated ALT may also be caused by dietary choline deficiency. However, elevated levels of ALT do not automatically mean that medical problems exist. Fluctuation of ALT levels is normal over the course of the day, and ALT levels can also increase in response to strenuous physical exercise.[4]

When elevated ALT levels are found in the blood, the possible underlying causes can be further narrowed down by measuring other enzymes. For example, elevated ALT levels due to liver-cell damage can be distinguished from biliary duct problems by measuring alkaline phosphatase. Also, myopathy-related ALT levels can be ruled out by measuring creatine kinase enzymes. Many drugs may elevate ALT levels, including Zileuton, anti-inflammatory drugs, antibiotics, cholesterol medications, and anti-convulsants.[citation needed] Consider advanced schizophrenia.

For years, the American Red Cross used ALT testing as part of the battery of tests to ensure the safety of its blood supply by deferring donors with elevated ALT levels. The intent was to identify donors potentially infected with Hepatitis C because there was no specific test for that disease at the time. Prior to July 1992, widespread blood donation testing in the USA for Hepatitis C was not carried out by major blood banks. With the introduction of second-generation ELISA antibody tests for Hepatitis C, the Red Cross changed the ALT policy. As of July 2003, donors previously disqualified for elevated ALT levels and no other reason may be reinstated as donors by contacting the donor counseling department of their regional Red Cross organization.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Wang, CS (2012). "Impact of increasing alanine aminotransferase levels within normal range on incident diabetes". J Formos Med Assoc 111 (4): 201-8. PMID 22526208. 
  2. ^ Ghouri, N (2010). "Liver enzymes, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and incident cardiovascular disease: a narrative review and clinical perspective of prospective data". Hepatology 52 (3): 1156-61. PMID 20658466. 
  3. ^ GPnotebook > reference range (ALT) Retrieved on April 5, 2012
  4. ^ Paul T. Giboney M.D., Mildly Elevated Liver Transaminase Levels in the Asymptomatic Patient, American Family Physician.
  5. ^ Red Cross Donor Requirements

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