4.5 Article

The use of doubly labeled milk protein to measure postprandial muscle protein synthesis rates in vivo in humans

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 117, Issue 11, Pages 1363-1370

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00411.2014

Keywords

dietary protein; nutrition; stable isotopes; hypertrophy

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We aimed to determine the impact of precursor pool dilution on the assessment of postprandial myofibrillar protein synthesis rates (MPS). A Holstein dairy cow was infused with large amounts of L-[1-C-13] phenylalanine and L-[1-C-13] leucine, and the milk was collected and fractionated. The enrichment levels in the casein were 38.7 and 9.3 mole percent excess, respectively. In a subsequent human experiment, 11 older men (age: 71 +/- 1 y, body mass index: 26 +/- 0.1 kg.m(-2)) received a primed constant infusion of L-[ring-H-2(5)] phenylalanine and L-[1-C-13] leucine. Blood and muscle samples were collected before and after the ingestion of 20-g doubly labeled casein to assess postprandial MPS based on the 1) constant tracer infusion of L-[ring-H-2(5)] phenylalanine, 2) ingestion of intrinsically L-[1-C-13] phenylalanine-labeled casein, and 3) constant infusion of L-[1-C-13] leucine in combination with the ingestion of intrinsically L-[1-C-13] leucine-labeled casein. Postprandial MPS was increased (P < 0.05) after protein ingestion (similar to 70% above postabsorptive values) based on the L-[1-C-13] leucine tracer. There was no significant stimulation of postprandial MPS (similar to 27% above postabsorptive values) when the calculated fractional synthesis rare was based on the L-[ring-H-2(5)] phenylalanine (P = 0.2). Comparisons of postprandial MPS based on the primed continuous infusion of L-[1-C-13] leucine or the ingestion of intrinsically L-[1-C-13] phenylalanine-labeled casein protein demonstrated differences compared with the primed continuous infusion of L-[ring-H-2(5)] phenylalanine (P > 0.05). Our findings confirm that the postprandial MPS assessed using the primed continuous tracer infusion approach may differ if tracer steady-state conditions in the precursor pools are perturbed. The use of intrinsically doubly labeled protein provides a method to study the metabolic fate of the ingested protein and the subsequent postprandial MPS response.

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