Uridine is a substrate in phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis via the Kennedy cycle (also known as the CDP-choline pathway, phosphatidylethanolamine also made via this pathway).[27][28][29]
In this pathway, choline kinase (CK) catalyzes choline into phosphocholine consuming an ATP molecule in the process[30][31] and has a micrmolar affinity in doing so (thus, much cellular choline is readily converted into phosphocholine[29]), and although this is not the only possible way to create phosphocholine (sphingomyelin degradation also confers phosphocholine[32]) it is the most prominent one and the first committed step of PC synthesis via the Kennedy cycle[29] and concentrations of phosphocholine are readily influenced by increasing choline intake.[33]
Elsewhere, Phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) converts cytidine triphosphate (CTP) into CDP-choline plus pyrophosphate (using the previously created phosphocholine as the source of choline). This stage is the slowest in the Kennedy cycle and rate-limiting, thus its activity determines overall PC synthesis.[34][35][36] Usually in cellular cultures, there is an abundance of phosphocholine and a lack of CDP-choline[29] and the rate-limit at this step is thought to be determined by availability of CTP.[37] This enzyme is also negatively regulated by brain phospholipids,[38][39] which seems to be one of the main mechanisms behind phospholipid homeostasis and prevent excessive phospholipid synthesis.[40]
Finally, Choline phosphotransferase (CPT, not to be confused with carnitine palmitoyltransferase which shares the CPT acronym) transfers the phosphocholine from CDP-choline to diacylglycerol (DAG).[41][42] There is also an enzyme called choline–ethanolamine phosphotransferase (CEPT) which has dual specificity for CDP-choline and CDP-ethanolamine[43][44] (and one specific for CDP-ethanolamine[45]), the donation of phosphocholine towards DAG is what finally creates phospholipids such as phosphatidylcholine (the other enzymes that use CDP-ethanolamine instead create phosphatidylethanolamine). This enzyme is not stimulated by incubation with uridine,[46] but is stimulated by nerve growth factor (NGF).[47]
Uridine and Cytidine are synthesized into phospholipids via the Kennedy cycle, and in the above cycle there is a rate-limit just before the CCT enzyme. The thing that determines the rate is the provision of cytidine for the enzyme to act upon
Uridine is used as a substrate from which CDP-Choline is synthesized from (albeit before the rate-limiting step) vicariously through cytidine.[46] Provision of cytidine (synthesized from uridine) is the rate-limit in the above pathway, and providing extra cytidine to cells or brain slices under adequate choline concentrations accelerates CDP-Choline synthesis.[37][48][49] Uridine is demonstrated to have the same property[46] via converting into cytidine through initial conversion to uridine triphosphate (UTP) and then CTP[46][50] and this has been confirmed in a living model.[51]
While uridine produced UTP at 5µM, it stimulated CDP-Choline synthesis maximally at 50µM in vitro;[46] the production of CDP-Choline from uridine has been confirmed in vivo from orally administered uridine.[52]
Adding uridine or cytidine to cellular cultures will increase cellular levels of cytidine and overcome the rate limit, which results in production of phospholipids
When looking at interventions, one study in otherwise healthy males given 500mg Uridine once daily for a week reported an increase in total brain phosphomonoesters (6.32%) mostly due to an increase in total brain phosphoethanolamine (7.17%), as the increase in phosphatidylcholine in the uridine group failed to be statistically significant.[53] This increase in phosphoethanolamine has been noted elsewhere with CDP-choline, and is not necessarily met with an increase in phosphatidylethanolamine.[54][55]
In regards to phosphatidylcholine, it has been hypothesized[53] that the lack of increase is due to rapid accumulation of PC into phospholipid membranes; this was due to previous studies noting a decrease in PC concentrations with uridine or uridine prodrugs.[56][54]
Oral intake of uridine does appear to increase brain phospholipid precursors in otherwise healthy persons, and seems to favor phosphatidylethanolamine. Although an increase in phosphatidylcholine cannot be ruled out, it has not been reliably detected in humans