Oral supplementation of citrulline in humans at 0.18g/kg has been noted to double plasma arginine[11] which has been replicated elsewhere[21] alongside an equivalent increase in ornithine concentrations[21] but these doublings in arginine and ornithine are alongside an 6-11 fold increase in plasma citrulline.[11][21]
A single dose of 6g citrulline malate (0.08g/kg) in athletes prior to exercise has noted increases in plasma citrulline (173% increase), ornithine (152% increase), and arginine (123% increase) when measured after exercise, and these values were normalized with 3 hours rest.[20] This same dose has been noted elsewhere to raise plasma citrulline and arginine to similar degrees.[25]
Interestingly, the aforementioned studies using 0.18g/kg citrulline noted a 6-11 fold increase in citrulline alongside a mere doubling of arginine and ornithine[11][21] while the later study using 6g (calculated to be 0.08g/kg) had a much smaller increase in citrulline but still more than doubled both arginine and ornithine.[20] This was also noted in a dose-response study using 2g up to 15g citrulline where citrulline in plasma followed linear dose-dependence and both arginine and ornithine having less dose-dependence.[22] The authors hypothesized that, due to the increase in arginine being less than predicted and serum citrulline being the main predictor of arginine synthesis[19] that this indicates a rate-limiting step being reached in the kidneys.
Oral Citrulline supplementation can increase plasma urea cycle amino acids which include citrulline itself (most drastic increase), ornithine, and arginine. Ornithine and Arginine can reach up to a doubling or tripling with 5-10g citrulline supplementation and then seems to be restricted from increasing further, while citrulline simply follows linear dose-response patterns (more oral supplementation causing more serum citrulline)
Citrulline has been noted to not influence serum levels of any of the branched chain amino acids at rest,[21] but can accelerate depletion of BCAAs induced by prolonged exercise (via increasing their utilization as fuel).[20]
A reduction of glutamine (13% following 0.18g/kg citrulline for 7 days) has been noted with citrulline supplementation[21] although another study noted acute usage of 6g Citrulline (0.08g/kg) failed to alter glutamine concentrations.[20]
Other amino acids tested (glutamic acid, aspartic acid, asparagine, alanine, lysine, tryptophan, phenylalanine, L-tyrosine, histidine) are mostly unaffected.[20]
Citrulline may deplete BCAA serum concentrations during exercise, but does not appear to do this inherently at rest. There are also some interactions with glutamine, but beyond that other amino acids do not appear to be affected