Literature DB >> 15941887

Dietary peptides increase endogenous amino acid losses from the gut in adults.

Paul J Moughan1, Christine A Butts, Angela M Rowan, Amélie Deglaire.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Accurate estimates of endogenous ileal total nitrogen and amino acid flows are necessary to ascertain true dietary amino acid digestibility coefficients and for the factorial estimation of dietary amino acid requirements.
OBJECTIVE: The objective was to ascertain endogenous amino acid losses from the small bowel in human subjects consuming a protein-free diet or a diet with enzyme-hydrolyzed casein (EHC; MW <5000) as the sole source of nitrogen.
DESIGN: The subjects were 8 men and women with terminal ileum ileostomies after ulcerative colitis who consumed the protein-free and EHC-based diets in a crossover design. Each subject received each test diet in single meals followed by 2 consecutive 9-h total collections of digesta. Digesta samples for the EHC treatment were centrifuged and ultrafiltered (10 000 MW cutoff), with the precipitate-plus-retentate fraction (>10 000 MW) providing a measurement of endogenous ileal amino acids.
RESULTS: The mean endogenous flows for most of the amino acids and nitrogen were significantly (P < 0.05) higher when determined with the EHC-based diet than with the protein-free diet. Mean (n = 8) endogenous ileal nitrogen flows were 2061 and 4233 mug/g dry matter intake for the protein-free and EHC-based diets, respectively.
CONCLUSION: The traditional protein-free method underestimates endogenous ileal amino acid loss in adults.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15941887     DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/81.6.1359

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0002-9165            Impact factor:   7.045


  7 in total

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2.  Endogenous proteins in the ileal digesta of adult humans given casein-, enzyme-hydrolyzed casein- or crystalline amino-acid-based diets in an acute feeding study.

Authors:  W Miner-Williams; A Deglaire; R Benamouzig; M F Fuller; D Tomé; P J Moughan
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Review 3.  Quantifying the contribution of dietary protein to whole body protein kinetics: examination of the intrinsically labeled proteins method.

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5.  A Casein Hydrolysate Does Not Enhance Ileal Endogenous Protein Flows Compared With the Parent Intact Casein When Fed to Growing Pigs.

Authors:  Amélie Deglaire; Paul J Moughan; Daniel Tomé
Journal:  Curr Dev Nutr       Date:  2018-10-11

6.  Glucose tolerance, lipids, and GLP-1 secretion in JCR:LA-cp rats fed a high protein fiber diet.

Authors:  Raylene A Reimer; James C Russell
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 5.002

7.  No protein intake compensation for insufficient indispensable amino acid intake with a low-protein diet for 12 days.

Authors:  Eveline A Martens; Sze-Yen Tan; Richard D Mattes; Margriet S Westerterp-Plantenga
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  7 in total

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