Abstract
A 24-h fast induced different patterns of change in the amino acid concentrations of liver, muscle, plasma and blood cells. Starvation produced generalized increases in blood amino acids despite decreases in plasma, thus increasing the blood cells amino acid pool. Muscle increased amino acid levels with fasting, while the changes were much more buffered in liver. The fraction of essential amino acids carried by the blood was considerably greater than that of muscle and liver. The size of muscle pool in the whole rat was much greater than that of liver and more than two orders of magnitude higher than that of the whole blood. Fasting-induced changes agree with the known transport of amino acids from muscle and other peripheral tissues towards the liver and other splanchnic organs.