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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 May 1.
Published in final edited form as: Neurochem Int. 2019 Feb 26;125:151–162. doi: 10.1016/j.neuint.2019.02.015

Table 1.

Amino acid content in eye as a function of increasing vigabatrin administered subcutaneously

Description Metabolite Vehicle 35 mg/kg/d 70 mg/kg/d 140 mg/kg/d
Drug Vigabatrin - 6 (1) 16 (1) 29 (1)
Drug-Related Carnosine 9 (1) nd nd 15 (2)
Neutral Amino Acids Glycine 575 (16) 728 (76)a 576(16) 618 (19)
Alanine 530 (12) 671 (77)a 576 (16) 541 (17)
Serine 220 (7) 281 (30)a 250 (16) 249 (12)
Cysteine 1.3 (1) nd nd 23 (1)a
Basic Amino Acids Lysine 306 (12) 398 (55)a 300 (9) 299 (6)
Citrulline 9 (1) nd nd 13 (2)a
Amines Phosphoethanolamine 547 (18) 735 (92)a 576 (16) 591 (12)
Ethanolamine 46 (2) 61 (7)a 43 (2) 44 (3)b

Legend: nmol/g tissue (mean ± (SEM))

a

p<0.05 compared to vehicle

b

p<0.05 between 35 and 140 dosing.

Abbreviations: nd, not detected. As an irreversible inhibitor of GABA-transaminase (GABA-T), vigabatrin is predicted to elevate both GABA and β-alanine (the latter a substrate for GABA-T). C arnosine is the L-histidine dipeptide of β-alanine. Animal numbers (n) were: n=21 for vehicle; n=8 for 35 mg/kg/d; n=6 for 70 mg/kg/d; and n=8 for 140 mg/kg/d.