| Literature DB >> 31394788 |
Insaf Berrazaga1,2, Valérie Micard2, Marine Gueugneau1, Stéphane Walrand3,4.
Abstract
Plant-sourced proteins offer environmental and health benefits, and research increasingly includes them in study formulas. However, plant-based proteins have less of an anabolic effect than animal proteins due to their lower digestibility, lower essential amino acid content (especially leucine), and deficiency in other essential amino acids, such as sulfur amino acids or lysine. Thus, plant amino acids are directed toward oxidation rather than used for muscle protein synthesis. In this review, we evaluate the ability of plant- versus animal-based proteins to help maintain skeletal muscle mass in healthy and especially older people and examine different nutritional strategies for improving the anabolic properties of plant-based proteins. Among these strategies, increasing protein intake has led to a positive acute postprandial muscle protein synthesis response and even positive long-term improvement in lean mass. Increasing the quality of protein intake by improving amino acid composition could also compensate for the lower anabolic potential of plant-based proteins. We evaluated and discussed four nutritional strategies for improving the amino acid composition of plant-based proteins: fortifying plant-based proteins with specific essential amino acids, selective breeding, blending several plant protein sources, and blending plant with animal-based protein sources. These nutritional approaches need to be profoundly examined in older individuals in order to optimize protein intake for this population who require a high-quality food protein intake to mitigate age-related muscle loss.Entities:
Keywords: animal-based proteins; critical review; muscle protein synthesis; older people; plant-based proteins; skeletal muscle
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31394788 PMCID: PMC6723444 DOI: 10.3390/nu11081825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1The percentage of dietary protein intake derived from plant and animal protein sources in different parts of the world [45].
Protein quality assessment based on protein sources.
| Protein Type | Protein Digestibility (%) | Biological Value (%) | Net Protein Utilization (%) | PDCAAS | DIAAS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal source | |||||
| Red meat 1 | 80 | 73 | 92 | ||
| Casein 1,3,6 | 99 | 77 | 76–82 | 100 | |
| Whey 1 | 104 | 92 | 100 | ||
| Milk 1,4,6 | 96 | 91 | 82 | 100 | 114 |
| Egg 1,4,6 | 98 | 100 | 94 | 100 | 113 |
| Plant source | |||||
| Black bean 1,6,8 | 70 | 75 | |||
| Cooked black bean 7,8 | 83 | 65 | 59 | ||
| Soy flour 5,8 | 80 | 93 | 89(SAA) | ||
| Soy protein isolate1,6 | 98 | 74 | 61 | 100 | |
| Green lentil 3,4 | 84 | 63 | 65 | ||
| Yellow split pea 4,6 | 88 | 64 | 73 | ||
| Cooked pea 7 | 89 | 60 | 58 | ||
| Pea protein concentrate 7 | 99 | 89 | 82 | ||
| Chickpea 3,4 | 89 | 74 | 83 | ||
| Peanuts 1 | 52 | ||||
| Roasted peanuts 7 | 98 | 51 | 43 | ||
| Peanut butter 3,4 | 98 | 45 | 46 | ||
| Whole grains 2 | 45 | ||||
| Wheat 3,5,6 | 91 | 56–68 | 53–65 | 51 | 45(Lys) |
| Wheat gluten 1 | 64 | 67 | 25 | ||
| White bread 4,6 | 93 | 28 | 29 | ||
| White rice 4,6 | 93 | 56 | 57 | ||
| Cooked rice 7 | 87 | 62 | 60 | ||
1 Hoffman and Falvo [52]; 2 van Vliet et al. [53]; 3 Sarwar et al. [54]; 4 Marinangeli and House [55]; 5 Mathai et al. [56]; 6 ANSES [57]; 7 Rutherfurd et al. [58]; 8 Sarwar [59]. Abbreviations: PDCAAS: protein digestibility-corrected amino acid score; DIAAS: digestible indispensable amino acid score; Lys: lysine; SAA: sulfur amino acids.
Essential amino acid scores of animal- and plant-based protein sources; adapted from Laleg et al. [60] and Gorissen and Witard [61].
| Plant-Based Proteins | Animal-Based Proteins | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat | Maize | Soybean | Pea | Faba Bean | Lentil | Whey | Casein | Milk | Beef | |
| Essential amino acid scores (%) 1 | ||||||||||
| Histidine | 140 | 187 | 173 | 167 | 231 | 176 | 127 | 180 | 180 | 240 |
| Isoleucine | 137 | 127 | 157 | 153 | 112 | 154 | 213 | 167 | 170 | 167 |
| Leucine | 115 | 219 | 136 | 125 | 121 | 132 | 168 | 151 | 161 | 144 |
| Lysine | 31 | 62 | 147 | 182 | 158 | 160 | 204 | 169 | 153 | 207 |
| Methionine + Cysteine | 120 | 127 | 91 | 73 | 79 | 91 | 130 | 125 | 134 | 157 |
| Phenylalanine + Tyrosine | 290 | 300 | 277 | 267 | 247 | 263 | 227 | 343 | 313 | 280 |
| Threonine | 109 | 161 | 174 | 191 | 156 | 165 | 291 | 187 | 174 | 209 |
| Valine | 108 | 128 | 126 | 131 | 95 | 135 | 162 | 162 | 159 | 133 |
1 Scores are calculated based on recommendations for a healthy human adult [62].
Studies carried out in the last ten years, assessing the anabolic properties of plant-based protein sources.
| Study Type | Study (Reference) | Design | Method | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | Kanda et al. [ | Young male Sprague-Dawley rats: | Isotope tracer | Soy proteins had an inferior effect on muscle protein synthesis after exercise compared with dairy proteins |
| Norton et al. [ | Young rats: | Isotope tracer | Exp 2: Fortifying wheat with leucine to match the leucine content of whey diet induced similar anabolic responses, i.e., similar muscle protein synthesis rates | |
| Tang et al. [ | 18 M | Isotope tracer | Muscle protein synthesis rates were in this order | |
| Yang et al. [ | 30 M | Isotope tracer | Soy protein isolate had less ability to stimulate muscle protein synthesis, compared to whey protein isolate under both rested and post-exercise conditions | |
| Gorissen et al. [ | 60 M | Isotope tracer | Muscle protein synthesis rates were lower after ingesting 35 g wheat protein than after the same amount of casein. | |
| Laleg et al. [ | Young male Wistar Rats | Echo-MRI | Rats fed legume-enriched pasta or wheat gluten pasta had a lower LM than rats fed casein | |
| Chronic | Volek et al. [ | 63 M + F | DXA | Daily supplementation with whey was more effective than isoproteic and isocaloric supplement containing soy protein in enhancing LM during resistance training |
| Mobley et al. [ | 75 F | DXA | Whey and soy supplement groups showed similar increases in total body skeletal muscle mass and type I and II fiber cross-sectional area during resistance training | |
| Banaszek et al. [ | 15 M + F | BIA | Ingestion of whey and pea protein produced similar outcomes in measurements of body composition, especially LM and muscle thickness | |
| Chan et al. [ | 1411 M + 1315 F | DXA | Higher plant (but not total and animal) protein intakes were associated with reduced muscle loss | |
| Chronic | Isanejad et al. [ | 554 F | DXA | Higher total and animal protein intakes were associated with increased LM and ALM |
| Sahni et al. [ | 1139 M + 1497 F | DXA | Higher total and animal (but not plant) protein intakes were associated with higher LM in the leg | |
| Miki et al. [ | 168 M + F with type 2 diabetes | BIA | Total and plant protein intakes were positively associated with skeletal muscle mass | |
| Huang et al. [ | 327 M + F | BIA | Low total and plant protein intakes were associated with a higher risk for low muscle mass | |
| Verreijen et al. [ | 3075 M + F | DXA | Higher total, animal and plant protein intakes were not associated with changes in mid-thigh-muscle CSA | |
| Mangano et al. [ | 2986 M + F | DXA | Individuals in the legume protein food cluster had significantly lower ALM compared with subjects in all other protein food clusters. |
Abbreviations: M: male; F: female; CS: cross-sectional; L: longitudinal; FFQ: food-frequency questionnaire; BDHQ: brief-type self-administered diet history questionnaire; LM: lean mass; ALM: appendicular lean mass; CC: concentrate; BW: body weight; Exp: experiment; DXA: dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; BIA: bioelectrical impedance analysis; CSA: cross-sectional area.