Effects of dietary protein level on duodenal mucosal protein synthesis and whole-body protein turnover in healthy humans

1995 ◽  
Vol 108 (4) ◽  
pp. A718
2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert R Wolfe ◽  
Sanghee Park ◽  
Il-Young Kim ◽  
Paul J Moughan ◽  
Arny A Ferrando

Whole-body protein turnover (protein synthesis, breakdown, and net balance) model enables quantification of the response to a variety of circumstances, including the response to meal feeding. In the fed state, the whole-body protein turnover model requires taking account of the contribution of absorbed tracee to the observed total appearance of tracee in the peripheral blood (exogenous appearance, RaEXO). There are different approaches to estimating RaEXO. The use of an intrinsically labeled dietary protein is based on the overriding assumption that the appearance in the peripheral circulation of a tracer amino acid incorporated into a dietary protein is exactly proportional to the appearance of absorbed tracee. The bioavailability approach is based on the true ileal digestibility of the dietary protein and the irreversible loss of the tracee in the splanchnic bed via hydroxylation of the tracee (phenylalanine). Finally, RaEXO can be estimated as the increase above the basal rate of appearance of the tracee using traditional tracer dilution methodology. In this paper, we discuss the pros and cons of each approach and conclude that the bioavailability method is the least likely to introduce systematic errors and is therefore the preferable approach.


1994 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul J. Pacy ◽  
Gill M. Price ◽  
David Halliday ◽  
Marcello R. Quevedo ◽  
D. Joe Millward

1. The diurnal changes in whole body protein turnover associated with the increasing fasting body nitrogen (N) losses and feeding gains with increasing protein intake were investigated in normal adults. [13C]Leucine, [2H5]phenylalanine and [2H2]tyrosine kinetics, were measured during an 8h primed, continuous infusion during the fasting and feeding phase together with fed-state N turnover assessed with [15N]glycine after 12 days of adaptation to diets containing 0.36 (LP), 0.77 (MP), 1.59 (GP) and 2.07 (HP) g of protein day−1 kg−1. Measurements were also made of fasting and fed resting metabolic rate and plasma hormone levels. 2. Resting metabolic rate in the fasted and fed state was not influenced by dietary protein intake, but was increased by feeding (11-13%, P <0.01) with no influence of dietary protein concentration. Fasting plasma insulin levels were not influenced by protein intake and were increased by feeding independent of protein intake. Fasted but not fed values of insulinlike growth factor-1 increased with protein intake, although no feeding response was observed. Thyroid hormones (free and total tri-iodothyronine) did not change in any state. 3. For leucine with increasing protein intake the increasing fasting losses reflected increasing rates of protein degradation, although the changes were small and only significant between GP and MP intakes. The increasing leucine gain on feeding was associated with increasing rates of protein synthesis and falling rates of protein degradation, reflecting a progressive inhibition of degradation with feeding, and a change from inhibition of synthesis (LP diet) to stimulation (GP and HP diets). Mean daily rates of synthesis and degradation did not change with protein intake. 4. Phenylalanine and tyrosine kinetics were calculated from adjusted values based on leucine kinetics and published data of the hepatic/plasma enrichment ratio. With the increased protein intake, the increasing fasting losses of phenylalanine (GP > MP) were mediated by increasing rates of degradation (paired t-tests). The increasing phenylalanine gain (GP > MP > LP) was due to increasing fed-state rates of synthesis and falling rates of degradation, reflecting a progressive inhibition of degradation, a stimulation of hydroxylation and a variable response of synthesis ranging from inhibition at the lowest intake to stimulation at higher intakes. For tyrosine a similar progressive inhibition of degradation with intake was shown. Mean daily rates of synthesis and degradation (phenylalanine) and degradation (tyrosine) did not change with protein intake. 5. Estimation of protein turnover from 15N excretion in urea and ammonia during 9 h after 1 h intravenous infusion of [15N]glycine in the fed state on the LP, MP and GP diets indicated that neither synthesis nor degradation were influenced by dietary protein level. Synthesis estimated from 15N kinetics was significantly correlated with that determined from leucine kinetics (r = 0.78, n = 14, P <0.01) and from phenylalanine kinetics (r = 0.53, n = 14, P <0.05), and degradation estimated from 15N kinetics was significantly correlated with that determined from leucine kinetics (r = 0.60, n = 14, P <0.05). Thus the [15N]glycine, [13C]leucine and [2H5]phenylalanine methods gave broadly comparable results. 6. We conclude that the feeding response of protein synthesis, degradation and amino acid oxidation reflects the combined impact of insulin and tissue amino acid levels with insulin inhibiting degradation and with amino acids both stimulating synthesis and oxidation and also further inhibiting degradation. Although the dietary protein level influences the extent of these feeding responses, it does not influence the mean daily rate of protein turnover. The rate of whole body protein turnover per se is unlikely to provide an indicator of protein nutritional status.


1999 ◽  
Vol 277 (6) ◽  
pp. E1028-E1031 ◽  
Author(s):  
Imad M. Nakshabendi ◽  
Ruth McKee ◽  
Shaun Downie ◽  
Robin I. Russell ◽  
Michael J. Rennie

We investigated possible differences in the rates of mucosal protein synthesis between the proximal and distal regions of the small intestine. We took advantage of access to the gut mucosa available in otherwise healthy patients with ileostomy in whom the terminal ileum was histologically normal. All subjects received primed, continuous intravenous infusions ofl-[1-13C]leucine after an overnight fast. After 4 h of tracer infusion, jejunal biopsies were obtained using a Crosby-Kugler capsule introduced orally; ileal biopsies were obtained via endoscopy via the ileostomy. Protein synthesis was calculated from protein labeling relative to intracellular leucine enrichment obtained by appropriate mass spectrometric measurements. Rates of jejunal and ileal mucosal protein synthesis were significantly different ( P < 0.001) at 2.14 ± 0.2 and 1.2 ± 0.2 %/h (means ± SD). These are lower than rates in normal healthy duodenum (2.53 ± 0.25 %/h), suggesting a gradation of rates of synthesis along the bowel. Together with other data, these results suggest that mucosae of the bowel contribute not more than 10% to whole body protein turnover.


1999 ◽  
Vol 97 (6) ◽  
pp. 633-638 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. M. NAKSHABENDI ◽  
S. DOWNIE ◽  
R. I. RUSSELL ◽  
M. J. RENNIE

We used stable-isotope-labelled amino acids to measure the effects of alcoholic liver disease (ALD) on whole-body protein turnover and small-intestinal mucosal protein synthesis. Groups comprising eight patients with ALD and eight healthy control subjects were studied. They received primed, continuous intravenous infusions of L-[1-13C]leucine after an overnight fast; after 4 h, duodenal biopsies were obtained via endoscopy. Protein synthesis was calculated from protein labelling relative to intracellular leucine enrichment. Rates of duodenal mucosal protein synthesis were 2.58±0.32%·h-1 (mean±S.D.) in the normal subjects and 2.04±0.18%·h-1 in the ALD patients (P< 0.003), despite the fact that the protein synthetic capacity (μg of RNA/mg of protein) was higher in ALD patients (160±14 compared with 137±6 μg/mg; P < 0.003). The mucosal cell size (protein/DNA ratio) was lower in ALD patients (9.23±0.91 compared with 13±2.2 μg/mg; P< 0.002). Although the mean rates of whole-body protein turnover were not significantly different between the two groups (204±18 and 196±44 μmol leucine·h-1·kg-1 for ALD and control subjects respectively), there was, in the ALD patients, an inverse relationship between the rate of small-intestinal mucosal protein synthesis and the severity of ALD; furthermore, there was a direct relationship between the rate of whole-body protein turnover and the severity of ALD. Thus there was an inverse relationship between the rate of small-intestinal mucosal protein synthesis and the rate of whole-body protein turnover in ALD patients, which was not seen in the normal subjects.


2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Russell ◽  
G. E. Lobley ◽  
D. J. Millward

The cat (Felis silvestris catus) has a higher dietary protein requirement than omnivores and herbivores, thought to be due to metabolic inflexibility. An aspect of metabolic flexibility was examined with studies of whole-body protein turnover at two levels of dietary protein energy, moderate protein (MP; 20 %) and high protein (HP; 70 %), in five adult cats in a crossover design. Following a 14 d pre-feed period, a single intravenous dose of [15N]glycine was administered and cumulative excretion of the isotope in urine and faeces determined over 48 h. N flux increased (P<0·005) with dietary protein, being 56 (SE 5) MMOL /G BODY WEIGHT (BW) PER D FOR CATS FED THE MP DIET AND 146 (se 8) mmol /g BW per d for cats fed the HP diet. Protein synthesis was higher (P<0·05) on the HP diet (75 (se 10) mmol /g BW per d; 6·6 (se 1) g protei/g BW per d) than the MP diet (38 (se 5) mmol /g BW per d; 3·4 (se 0·4) g protei/g BW per d). Protein breakdown was higher (P<0·05) on the HP diet (72 (se 8) mmol /g BW per d; 6·3 (se 0·7) g protei/g BW per d) than the MP diet (44 (se 3) mmol /g BW per d; 3·9 (se 0·3) g protei/g BW per d). Compared with other species the rate of whole-body protein synthesis in the well-nourished cat (9·7 (se 1·3) g protei/g BW0·75per d) is at the lower end of the range. These results show that feline protein turnover adapts to dietary protein as has been shown in other species and demonstrates metabolic flexibility. Further work is required to determine exactly why cats have such a high protein requirement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuangyao Wang ◽  
Chris G. Carter ◽  
Quinn P. Fitzgibbon ◽  
Basseer M. Codabaccus ◽  
Gregory G. Smith

AbstractThis is the first study in an aquatic ectotherm to combine a stoichiometric bioenergetic approach with an endpoint stochastic model to explore dietary macronutrient content. The combination of measuring respiratory gas (O2 and CO2) exchange, nitrogenous (ammonia and urea) excretion, specific dynamic action (SDA), metabolic energy substrate use, and whole-body protein synthesis in spiny lobster, Sagmariasus verreauxi, was examined in relation to dietary protein. Three isoenergetic feeds were formulated with varying crude protein: 40%, 50% and 60%, corresponding to CP40, CP50 and CP60 treatments, respectively. Total CO2 and ammonia excretion, SDA magnitude and coefficient, and protein synthesis in the CP60 treatment were higher compared to the CP40 treatment. These differences demonstrate dietary protein influences post-prandial energy metabolism. Metabolic use of each major energy substrate varied at different post-prandial times, indicating suitable amounts of high-quality protein with major non-protein energy-yielding nutrients, lipid and carbohydrate, are critical for lobsters. The average contribution of protein oxidation was lowest in the CP50 treatment, suggesting mechanisms underlying the most efficient retention of dietary protein and suitable dietary inclusion. This study advances understanding of how deficient and surplus dietary protein affects energy metabolism and provides approaches for fine-scale feed evaluation to support sustainable aquaculture.


1990 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 509-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
C A Stuart ◽  
R E Shangraw ◽  
E J Peters ◽  
R R Wolfe

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