REQUIREMENTS FOR INDISPENSABLE AMINO-ACIDS IN ADULT HUMANS - LONGER-TERM AMINO-ACID KINETIC-STUDY WITH SUPPORT FOR THE ADEQUACY OF THE MASSACHUSETTS-INSTITUTE-OF-TECHNOLOGY AMINO-ACID REQUIREMENT PATTERN

Citation
Js. Marchini et al., REQUIREMENTS FOR INDISPENSABLE AMINO-ACIDS IN ADULT HUMANS - LONGER-TERM AMINO-ACID KINETIC-STUDY WITH SUPPORT FOR THE ADEQUACY OF THE MASSACHUSETTS-INSTITUTE-OF-TECHNOLOGY AMINO-ACID REQUIREMENT PATTERN, The American journal of clinical nutrition, 58(5), 1993, pp. 670-683
Citations number
73
Categorie Soggetti
Nutrition & Dietetics
ISSN journal
00029165
Volume
58
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
670 - 683
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9165(1993)58:5<670:RFIAIA>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
Twenty young men received an L-amino acid diet, supplying 140 mg N . k g-1 . d-1 and patterned as in the Egg diet for 1 wk. and then for 3 wk either a pattern based on international recommendations (modified FAO diet; n = 7), our new amino acid requirement pattern (MIT diet; n = 7 ), or the egg pattern (Egg diet; n = 6). At the end of the initial wee k, at 1 and 3 wk with the three experimental diets, and after 3 d afte r return to the Egg diet, an 8-h continuous intravenous infusion with [1-C-13]leucine (3 h fast, 5 h fed while subjects received hourly meal s supplying the equivalent of one-twelfth the daily intake) was conduc ted. After 3 wk with the different diets, mean daily leucine balances were lower (P < 0.01) with the FAO diet (-160 mumol . kg-1 . d-1) than with the MIT diet (-15 mumol . kg-1 . d-1). Together with changes in plasma amino acid profiles [eg, methionine increased (P < 0.05) during feeding with the FAO and Egg diets but not with the MIT diet; increas ed proline concentrations during the fed state (P < 0.05) with the FAO diet but not with the MIT or Egg diets] we interpret these findings t o indicate that the FAO diet is not capable of maintaining amino acid homeostasis, as is the case with the MIT and Egg diets.