Previous studies that demonstrated that mouse brain accumulated significantly more radioactivity from subcutaneously administered 5-methyltetrahydrofolate labelled in the methyl group compared to the label in the folate moiety are open to two interpretations. The methyl group could have been transferred to another compound (probably methionine) prior to its transport into the brain. Alternatively, if plasma 5-methyltetrahydrofolate per se is significantly involved in the provision of methyl groups to brain and nerve tissue it would be expected that the folate moiety would be returned to the plasma to complete the cycle and thus would appear not to have been taken up. In this article, using competition experiments that exploit the differences in the mechanism of transport of methionine and 5-methyltetrahydrofolate into brain and nerve, evidence is presented that in the rat the methyl group of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate is transported after its conversion to methionine.
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