| Literature DB >> 32072297 |
Abstract
Taurine (a sulfur-containing β-amino acid), creatine (a metabolite of arginine, glycine and methionine), carnosine (a dipeptide; β-alanyl-L-histidine), and 4-hydroxyproline (an imino acid; also often referred to as an amino acid) were discovered in cattle, and the discovery of anserine (a methylated product of carnosine; β-alanyl-1-methyl-L-histidine) also originated with cattle. These five nutrients are highly abundant in beef, and have important physiological roles in anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory reactions, as well as neurological, muscular, retinal, immunological and cardiovascular function. Of particular note, taurine, carnosine, anserine, and creatine are absent from plants, and hydroxyproline is negligible in many plant-source foods. Consumption of 30 g dry beef can fully meet daily physiological needs of the healthy 70-kg adult human for taurine and carnosine, and can also provide large amounts of creatine, anserine and 4-hydroxyproline to improve human nutrition and health, including metabolic, retinal, immunological, muscular, cartilage, neurological, and cardiovascular health. The present review provides the public with the much-needed knowledge of nutritionally and physiologically significant amino acids, dipeptides and creatine in animal-source foods (including beef). Dietary taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine and 4-hydroxyproline are beneficial for preventing and treating obesity, cardiovascular dysfunction, and ageing-related disorders, as well as inhibiting tumorigenesis, improving skin and bone health, ameliorating neurological abnormalities, and promoting well being in infants, children and adults. Furthermore, these nutrients may promote the immunological defense of humans against infections by bacteria, fungi, parasites, and viruses (including coronavirus) through enhancing the metabolism and functions of monocytes, macrophages, and other cells of the immune system. Red meat (including beef) is a functional food for optimizing human growth, development and health.Entities:
Keywords: Amino acids; Creatine; Function; Health; Metabolites; Peptides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32072297 PMCID: PMC7088015 DOI: 10.1007/s00726-020-02823-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Amino Acids ISSN: 0939-4451 Impact factor: 3.789
The content of crude protein, amino acids, creatine, carnosine, anserine, and 4-hydroxyproline in beef and plant-source foods
| Food | CP (mg/g dry weight of food) | Taurine (mg/g dry weight of food) | Carnosine (mg/g dry weight of food) | Anserine (mg/g dry weight of food) | Creatine (mg/g dry weight of food) | OH-Pro (mg/g dry weight of food) | β-Alanine (mg/g dry weight of food) | Glycine (mg/g dry weight of food) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beef cut—chuck | 680 | 2.34 | 15.2 | 2.79 | 9.60 | 1.73 | 0.453 | 31.0 |
| Beef cut—round | 721 | 2.78 | 21.4 | 3.25 | 10.2 | 1.74 | 0.615 | 33.3 |
| Beef cut—loin | 734 | 2.92 | 24.2 | 3.66 | 10.5 | 1.77 | 0.712 | 33.7 |
| Corn | 101 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.04 | 0.010 | 4.43 |
| Potato | 98.4 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.08 | 0.046 | 2.74 |
| Soybean | 446 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.78 | 0.069 | 24.0 |
| Wheat flour | 134 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.43 | 0.0040 | 6.31 |
| White rice | 82.5 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.04 | 0.0024 | 3.95 |
Adapted from Wu et al. (2016), Wu et al. (2020), and Hou et al. (2019)
CP crude protein (6.25 × N%), OH-Pro 4-hydroxyproline
Fig. 1Absorption of taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine, and 4-hydroxyproline by the human small intestine and the transport of the nutrients in blood. Dietary collagen is hydrolyzed by proteases, peptidases and prolidase to free amino acids as well as 4-hydroxyproline and its peptides. Dietary taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine, and 4-hydroxyproline are taken up by the enterocyte across its apical membrane via specific transports. Inside the cell, taurine, creatinine and anserine are not degraded, some of the 4-hydroxyproline-containing peptides are hydrolyzed to 4-hydroxyproline and its peptides, some 4-hydroxyproline is oxidized to glycine, and carnosine undergoes limited catabolism. Taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine, and 4-hydroxyproline, as well as the products of carnosine hydrolysis (β-alanine and histidine) exit the enterocyte across its basolateral membrane into the lamina propria of the intestinal mucosa via specific transporters (Wu 2013). The absorbed nutrients are transported in blood in the free forms for uptake by extra-intestinal tissues via specific transporters. β-Ala β-alanine, CAT cationic amino acid transporter, CN1 carnosinase-1 (serum carnosinase), CN2 carnosinase-2 (tissue carnosinase), CreaT1 creatine transporter-1, CreaT2 creatine transporter-2, GAT γ-aminobutyrate transporter, HypD 4-hydroxyproline-containing dipeptides, HypT 4-hydroxyproline-containing tripeptides, OH-Pro 4-hydroxyproline, PAT1 proton-(H+-coupled) and pH-dependent but Na+- and Cl−-independent transporter for taurine (low-affinity, high-capacity transporter), PepT1 peptide transporter-1, PepT2 peptide transporter 2, PHT1/2 peptide/histidine transporters 1 and 2, TauT taurine transporters. Note that the distribution of PHT1/2 in tissues is species-specific in that human skeletal muscle expresses PHT1 but no PHT2, whereas mouse skeletal muscle expresses both PHT1 and PHT2
Fig. 2The transport of bile salts from the liver to the duodenum and the return of bile salt from the distal ileum to the liver via the enteral-hepatic circulation in humans. Conjugated bile acids are exported by the ATP-dependent bile salt export pump out of the hepatocyte through its canalicular (apical) membrane into the canaliculus. The bile salts subsequently enter bile ducts, the common hepatic duct, and the gallbladder. During digestion, the bile salts are secreted from the gallbladder to the common bile duct and then the duodenum. In the distal ileum, a fraction of bile salts is hydrolyzed by microbial bile salt hydrolases to form bile acids and taurine or glycine. Taurine, glycine and bile salts are efficiently taken up by the enterocytes of the distal ileum via specific transporters. The substances are transported in the blood for uptake by the hepatocyte via its sinusoidal basolateral membrane. During each enteral-hepatic cycle, about 95% of the liver-derived bile salts are reabsorbed to the liver. ASBT apical sodium-dependent bile salt/acid transporter (in ileal enterocytes), BA bile acids (unconjugated), BSEP bile salt export pump, CBA conjugated bile acids, Gly glycine, GlyT glycine transporters, M3 multidrug resistance protein-3, MBSL microbial bile salt hydrolases, NTCP Na+-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide, OATP organic anion transporting polypeptide family, OSTα/β organic solute transporter subunit α/β, PD passive diffusion, Tau taurine, TauT taurine transporters
Beneficial effects of dietary taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine and 4-hydroxyproline on human health
| Dosage | Subjects | Benefits | System | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taurine | ||||
| 1.5 to 2.25 g/day for 12 weeks | Children maintained on long-term PNWT | Prevention of electroretinographic abnormality | Retinal health | Geggel et al. ( |
| 0.4 or 1.6 g/day for 2 weeks | Healthy adults | Decreases in platelet aggregation and thromboxane release from platelets | Cardiovascular health | Xu et al. ( |
| 1.5 g/day for 90 days | Patients with IDDM | Increase in platelet taurine and a decrease in platelet aggregation | Cardiovascular health | Xu et al. ( |
| 3 g/day for 7 weeks | Overweight or obese adults | Decreases in body weight, plasma TAGs, and atherogenic index | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | Xu et al. ( |
| 3 g/day for 60 days | Adults with mild or borderline HPT | Decrease in blood pressure | Cardiovascular health | Xu et al. ( |
| 3 g/day for 30 to 45 days | Patients with CHF | Decrease in left ventricular end-diastolic volume and increase in serum creatinine | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | Xu et al. ( |
| 3 g/day for 6 weeks | Patients with CHF | Improvement in cardiac function | Cardiovascular health | Xu et al. ( |
| 6 g/day for 3 weeks | Healthy adults fed a high-fat diet (40% energy from fats) | Decreases in total cholesterol, LDL, and LDL-cholesterol coentrations in serum | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | Xu et al. ( |
| 6 g/day for 1 week | Patients with hypertension | Decrease in blood pressure | Cardiovascular health | Militante and Lombardini ( |
| 2 g/day for 4 weeks | Patients with chronic liver disease | Amelioration of muscle cramps | Skeletal muscle and metabolic health | Vidot et al. ( |
| 9–12 g/day for 52 weeks | Patients with MELAS | Reduce the recurrence of stroke-like episodes | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | Ohsawa et al. ( |
| 1–6 g/day for up to 2 weeks | Healthy adults | Improve endurance exercise performance | Skeletal muscle and metabolic health | Waldron et al. ( |
| Creatine (Cr) in the form of Cr monohydrate (CrM) as Cr phosphate (CrP) | ||||
| 20 g CrM/day for 6 days; 2 g CrM/day for 22 days | Healthy adult men | Improve muscular strength and reduce intensive exercise-associated muscle damage | Skeletal muscle health | Wang et al. ( |
| 4 g CrM/day for 6 weeks | Healthy adult men and women | Enhance anaerobic power and strength | Skeletal muscle health | Hummer et al. ( |
| 4 g CrM/day for 6 weeks | Healthy adult men | Enhance sprint cycling performance | Skeletal muscle health | Crisafulli et al. ( |
| 10–20 g CrM or CrP/day for 6 weeksa | Healthy adult men | Enhance muscular strength and lean-tissue mass in the body | Skeletal muscle and metabolic health | Peeters et al. ( |
| 3 g CrM/day for weeks or months | Healthy adult men and women | Improve anti-oxidative capacity, exercise performance and recovery | Skeletal muscle and metabolic health | Kreider et al. ( |
| 3 g CrM/day for weeks or months | Patients with neurodegenerative diseases | Improve neurological and muscular function | Neurological and muscle health | Kreider et al. ( |
| Carnosine | ||||
| 116 mg/day for 8 weeks | Patients with gastric ulcers | Enhance gastric healing | Gastric health | Sakae and Yanagisawa ( |
| 1.5 g/day for 30 days | Patients with Parkinson’s disease | Improve neurological function | Neurological health | Boldyrev et al. ( |
| 2 g/day for 3 months | Patients with schizophrenia | Improve neurological function | Neurological health | Chengappa et al. ( |
| 0.8 g/day for 8 weeks | Patients with austic spectrum disorder | Improve behavior as well as social and communication skills | Neurological health | Chez et al. ( |
| 1 g/day for 12 weeks | Patients with type-2 diabetes | Improve metabolic profiles; decrease protein glycosylation and body fat | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | Houjeghani et al. ( |
| 2 g/day for 12 weeks | Overweight or obese subjects | Improve metabolic profiles; increase lean-tissue mass in the body | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | de Courten et al. ( |
| 0.5 to 2 g/day for up to 6 months | Patients with heart failure | Enhance cardiac output and improve the quality of life | Cardiovascular and metabolic health | Cicero and Colletti ( |
| Anserine | ||||
| 10 or 100 mg/45 kg body weight | Adults undergoing OGTT | Reduce glucose concentration in blood | Metabolic health | Kubomura et al. ( |
| Anserine and carnosine mixb | Elderly subjects | Maintain adequate blood flow to the brain, preserve verbal episodic memory, and improve resting-state network connectivity | Neurological health | Ding et al. ( |
| Anserine and carnosine mixb | Elderly subjects | Attenuate cognitive impairment | Neurological health | Masuoka et al. ( |
| Anserine and carnosine mixb | Elderly subjects | Inhibit the production of inflammatory cytokines | Metabolic health and immunity | Katakura et al. ( |
| Anserine and carnosine mixb | Elderly subjects | Enhance muscular strength and exercise performance | Skeletal muscle health | Hirohiko et al. ( |
| 0.01 to 0.6 g/day for weeks or months | Adults | Ameliorate stress; enhance physical strength; improve metabolic profiles, immunity, neurological function, and wound healing; promotes lactation | Endocrine, metabolic, immune, skeletal muscle, and neurological health | Li et al. ( |
| 4-Hydroxyproline in the form of collagen hydrolysate (CH) | ||||
| 2.5 or 5 g CH/day for 8 weeks | Adult women | Improve skin elasticity | Skin health | Proksch et al. ( |
| 5 g CH/day for 6 weeks | Adult women | Enhance moisture content in the epidermis | Skin health | Matsumoto et al. ( |
| 10 g CH/day for 8 weeks | Adult women | Improve collagen density in the dermis and the structure of collagen network | Skin health | Asserin et al. ( |
| 5 g CH/day for 8 weeks | Adult women | Improve facial skin conditions | Skin health | Inoue et al. ( |
| 5 g CH/day for 1 year | Postmenopausal women | Improve mineral density in bones | Bone health | König et al. ( |
| 10 g CH/day for 24 weeks | Postmenopausal women | Mitigate osteoporosis | Bone health | Adam et al. ( |
| 10 g CH/day for 60 days | Subjects with knee osteoarthritis | Ameliorate joint pain | Bone health | Deal and Moskowitz ( |
There were no side effects for the ingestion of taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine and hydroxyproline at the indicated dosages on all the studies
CHF congestive heart failure, HPT hypertension, IDDM insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, LDL low-density lipoproteins, MELAS mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes, OGTT oral glucose tolerance test, PNWY parenteral nutrition (supply of nutrients through intravenous infusion) without taurine, TAGs triacylglycerols, CH collagen hydrolysate, Cr creatine, CrM creatine monohydrate, CrP creatine phosphate
a20 g CrM or CrP/day for 3 days, followed by 10 g CrM or CrP/day for 39 days
b1 g of anserine and carnosine mix per day, 3:1 (g/g), for 3 months
Metabolic needs for glycine and its dietary provision in the 70-kg healthy adult human
| Variable | Amount g/day |
|---|---|
| Dietary protein intakea | 52.5 |
| Bioavailability of dietary glycine | 1.42 |
| Glycine intake from dieta | 1.58 |
| Dietary glycine not digested (10%) | 0.16 |
| Digestible glycine intake from diet | 1.42 |
| Needs for glycine | 10.1 |
| Heme synthesisb | 0.25 |
| Creatine synthesisb | 1.00 |
| Purine synthesisb | 0.25 |
| Glutathione synthesisc | 0.57 |
| Net serine synthesisa,d | 1.36 |
| Bile salt synthesisc | 0.06 |
| Hippurate synthesisc | 0.54 |
| Irreversible loss through oxidation to CO2a | 5.03 |
| Urinary glycine lossc | 0.11 |
| Sweat and dermal glycine lossc | 0.08 |
| Ileal endogenous glycine losse | 0.66 |
| Colonic endogenous glycine losse | 0.15 |
| Glycine synthesis (calculated)f | 8.16 |
| From serinec | 2.54 |
| From dietary cholinec | 0.107 |
| From threnoinec | 0.022 |
| From endogenous sarcosinec | 0.142 |
| From carnitinec | 0.006 |
| From endogenous 4-hydroxyproline (Hyp)g | 5.34 |
| Glycine synthesis (measured)g | 9.10 |
| Dietary glycine intake meeting glycine needs | 14% |
| Contribution of Hyp to whole-body glycine synthesis | 59% |
aGibson et al. (2002). Adult humans consume 0.75 g protein/kg BW/day
bYu et al. (1985). This value refers to the healthy adult consuming 1.5 g protein/day
cMeléndez-Hevia et al. (2009)
dThe value is estimated from the plasma flux of glycine (22.6 g/day in the 70-kg healthy adult; Ginson et al. 2002) and the net conversion of plasma glycine into serine (i.e., 6% of plasma glycine flux; Butterworth et al. 1958)
eStarck et al. (2018)
fThe average value of 10.1 g/day for the healthy adult consuming 0.75 g protein/day (Gibson et al. 2002) and 8.09 g/day for the healthy adult consuming 1.5 g protein/day (Yu et al. 1985)
gThe value was calculated on the basis of the following: (1) the rate of degradation of mature collagens in the extracellular matrix is equal to the rate of net synthesis of collagen (i.e., the rate of collagen secreted from fibroblasts to the extracellular matrix; 96.5 g/day) in the healthy adult human (Meléndez-Hevia et al. 2009); (2) the content of 4-hydroxyproline in collagen is 10.73 g/100 g collagen; Wu et al. 2011); and (3) 90% of collagen-derived 4-hydroxyproline is catabolized to form glycine in the healthy adult human (Knight et al. 2006); namely, 96.5 × 10.73/100 × 0.90 × 75.07/131.13 = 5.34 g/day
Estimated physiological requirements of the 70-kg adult human for taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine, and 4-hydroxyproline for optimal health
| Nutrient | Physiological requirement | Provision of nutrient from 30-g dry weight of beef (mg) | Beef (30 g dry weight) meeting daily physiological requirement (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| mg/day | mg/kg BW per day | |||
| Taurine | 75 | 1.07 | 80.4 | 107 |
| Glycine | 10,100 | 144 | 980a | 10 |
| Creatine | 1,700 | 24.3 | 303 | 18 |
| Carnosine | 606 | 8.66 | 608 | 100 |
| Anserine | – | – | 96.9 | – |
| 4-Hydroxyproline | Unknown | Unknown | 52.4 | Unknown |
“–” Denotes no basal physiological requirement
a62% of the daily glycine intake by the healthy adult consuming 0.75 g protein/day (Gibson et al. 2002)
Fig. 3Major functions of dietary taurine, creatine, carnosine, anserine and 4-hydroxyproline on improving the health of multiple systems in humans. These beneficial effects of the nutrients are summarized on the basis of available evidence in the current literatrure. Some of the effects are tissue- and nutrient-specific. However, because all the systems of the body are integrated, the health of one system can affect that of other systems