| Literature DB >> 34307436 |
Gabriele Zaromskyte1, Konstantinos Prokopidis2, Theofilos Ioannidis1, Kevin D Tipton3, Oliver C Witard1,4.
Abstract
Background: The "leucine trigger" hypothesis was originally conceived to explain the post-prandial regulation of muscle protein synthesis (MPS). This hypothesis implicates the magnitude (amplitude and rate) of post-prandial increase in blood leucine concentrations for regulation of the magnitude of MPS response to an ingested protein source. Recent evidence from experimental studies has challenged this theory, with reports of a disconnect between blood leucine concentration profiles and post-prandial rates of MPS in response to protein ingestion. Aim: The primary aim of this systematic review was to qualitatively evaluate the leucine trigger hypothesis to explain the post-prandial regulation of MPS in response to ingested protein at rest and post-exercise in young and older adults. We hypothesized that experimental support for the leucine trigger hypothesis will depend on age, exercise status (rest vs. post-exercise), and type of ingested protein (i.e., isolated proteins vs. protein-rich whole food sources).Entities:
Keywords: aging; blood leucine kinetics; exercise; intact proteins; leucine threshold; muscle hypertrophy; protein-rich whole foods; skeletal muscle
Year: 2021 PMID: 34307436 PMCID: PMC8295465 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2021.685165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1A flow diagram of the screening process for selecting eligible studies.
Summary of findings from studies that measured blood leucine concentration profiles and post-prandial rates of muscle protein synthesis at rest in older adults.
| Fuchs et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (71 ± 1 yr) | Double-blinded, Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–5 h | No | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: BCAA (45–60 min) > Milk (75–90 min) > BCKA (45–60 min). | Milk (0.022 ± 0.002%/h) = BCAA (0.022 ± 0.002%/h) = BCKA (0.021 ± 0.001%/h) at 0–2 h from BL. |
| Devries et al. ( | Healthy, untrained females (69 ± 1 yr) | Single-blinded, parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | Yes | Peak and overall plasma leucine concentrations: Milk > milk + soy. | Milk>milk + soy; +53% from BL vs. +13% from BLCorrelation between peak plasma leucine concentrations and MPS:( |
| Reitelseder et al. ( | Healthy, moderately active males (69 ± 1 yr) | Single-blinded, RCT | Myofibrillar 0–3 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: WH > CAS at 15–90 min. | CAS (0.045 ± 0.003%/h) = > WH (0.043 ± 0.004%/h) |
| Kouw et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (72 ± 1 yr) | Double-blinded, parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–7.5 h | Yes | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: PRO20 + LEU (396 ± 20 μM) > PRO40 (316 ± 19 μM) > PRO20 (269 ± 10 μM) at 30–180 min. PRO40 > PRO20 + LEU at 180–480 min. | L-[ring-2H5]-phenylalanine) PRO40 (0.044 ± 0.003%/h) > PRO20 + LEU (0.039 ± 0.002%/h) > PRO20 (0.037 ± 0.003%/h) > PLA (0.033 ± 0.002%/h). |
| Gorissen et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (71 ± 1 yr) | Double-blinded, parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | No | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: 35g whey (580 ± 18 μM) > 60g wheat (378 ± 10 μM). | 35 g micellar casein > Whey > Wheat at 0–4h60 g WPH > 35 g whey at 2–4 h. |
| Churchward-Venne et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (71 ± 1 yr) | Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–5 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: Casein > Bovine milk serum casein at 30–180 min. | Bovine milk serum casein = casein at 0–2 h.(0.038 ± 0.005 vs. 0.031 ± 0.007%/h). |
| Mitchell et al. ( | Healthy, middle-aged sedentary to recreationally active males WPC (52.6 ± 3.9 yr) MPC (52.1 ± 6.4 yr) | Double-blinded RCT | Myofibrillar 0–3.5 h | No | Plasma leucine concentrations: WPC > MPC at 45 and 75 min | WPC (0.021 ± 0.018 %/h) > MPC (0.019 ± 0.009 %/h) at 0–210 min |
| Wall et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (74 ± 1 yr) | Parallel RCT | Mixed 0–6 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: CAS + LEU > CAS at 30–180 min. | CAS + LEU (0.0078 ± 0.001 %/h) > CAS (0046 ± 0.001 %/h) at 0–2 h. |
| Pennings et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (74 ± 1 yr) | Parallel RCT | Mixed 0–6 h | Yes | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: Whey (526 ± 21 μM) > casein hydrolysate (381 ± 14 μM) > casein (282 ± 13 μM). | Whey (0.15 ± 0.02%/h) > Casein hydrolysate (0.10 ± 0.01%/h) > Casein (0.08 ± 0.01%/h). |
| Koopman et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (64 ± 1 yr) | Crossover, Double-blinded trial | Mixed 0–6 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: CASH: 42.7 ± 2.3 > CAS: 32.6 ± 1.8 μmol·6 h/kg (AUC). | CASH (0.068 ± 0.006 %/h) > CAS (0.054 ± 0.004 %/h). |
AUC, area under curve; BCAA, branched-chain amino acids; BCKA, branched-chain keto acids; BL, baseline; LEU, leucine; MPC, milk protein concentrate; MPS, muscle protein synthesis; PLA, placebo; RCT, randomized controlled trial; WPC, whey protein concentrate; WPH, wheat protein hydrolysate.
Values are presented as means ± SE.
Summary of findings from studies that measured blood leucine concentration profiles and post-prandial rates of muscle protein synthesis following exercise in young adults.
| Churchward-Venne et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males (23 ± 0.4 yr) | Double-blinded, parallel RCT | Mixed 0–6 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: Whey > Soy + LEU > Soy (AUC) | Whey (0.054 ± 0.002%/h) = Soy (0.053 ± 0.004%/h) = Soy +Leu (0.056 ± 0.004%/h) |
| Churchward-Venne et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males (23 ± 0.3 yr) | Double-blinded, parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–6 h | No | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: whey (322 ± 10 μmol/L) > micellar casein (245 ± 5 μmol/L) > milk (242 ± 8 μmol/L) | Milk (0.059 ± 0.003%/h) = Casein (0.059 ± 0.005%h) > Whey (0.054 ± 0.002%/h) |
| Chan et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (22.5 ± 3.0 yr) | Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: mMPC > CAS by 58% from BL mMPC > MPC by 54% from BL, both at 30–90 min. | CAS by (140.6 ± 52.4%) > mMPC by (137.8 ± 72.1%) > MPC by (82.6 ± 64.8%) from BL |
| Trommelen et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males (24 ± 1 yr) | Double-blinded, RCT | Mixed 0–7.5 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: PRO + LEU > PRO at 30–300 min. | (L-[ |
| Burd et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males (22 ± 1 yr) | Crossover RCT | Mixed 0–5 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: Milk > beef at 30 min. Beef > milk at 60–120 min. | Milk by (128% ± 23%) > Beef by (91% ± 15%) at 0–2 h from BL. |
| Reidy et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males and females (WPI; 23.1 ± 1.0 yr; PB; 25.1 ± 1.2 yr) | Double-blinded, RCT | Mixed 0–4 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: WPI > PB at 20–120 min. | PB (0.088 ± 0.007%/h) = WPI (0.078 ± 0.009%/h) at 0–2 h; similar increase from BL |
| Tang et al. ( | Healthy, resistance-trained males (22.8 ± 3.9 yr) | Parallel RCT | Mixed 0–3 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: | Whey (0.091 ± 0.015 %/h) > soy (0.078 ± 0.014 %/h) > casein (0.047 ± 0.008%/h) (rest) |
| Wilkinson et al. ( | Healthy, resistance-trained males (23.1 ± 0.3 yr) | Single-blinded, RCT | Mixed 0–3 h | No | Overall whole-blood total amino acid concentrations: Soy ~ Milk at 60–180 min | Milk (0.10 ± 0.01 %/h) > Soy (0.07 ± 0.01 %/h) |
AUC, area under curve; BL, baseline; CAS, calcium caseinate; EAA, essential amino acids; LEU, leucine; mMPC, modified milk protein concentrate; MPC, milk protein concentrate; MPS, muscle protein synthesis; PB, protein blend; RCT, randomized controlled trial; VO.
Values are presented as means ± SE.
Summary of findings from studies that measured blood leucine concentration profiles and post-prandial rates of muscle protein synthesis at rest in younger adults.
| Pinckaers et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males (23 ± 3 yr) | Double-blind, Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–5h | No | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: Milk (353 ± 45 μM) > wheat + milk (301 ± 44 μM) > wheat (280 ± 37 μM). | Wheat + milk (0.067 ± 0.032 %/h) > milk (0.059 ± 0.024 %/h) > wheat (0.053 ± 0.025 %/h) at 0–2 h. |
| Luiking et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males and females (23 ± 1 yr) | Single-blinded, RCT | Mixed 0–4h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: | Soy > casein. |
AUC, area under curve; MPS, muscle protein synthesis; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Values are presented as means ± SE.
Summary of findings from studies that measured blood leucine concentration profiles and post-prandial rates of muscle protein synthesis following exercise in older adults.
| Oikawa et al. ( | Healthy, untrained females (69 ± 3 yr) | Double-blinded, parallel RCT30 g whey (4.3 g LEU) ( | Mixed 0–4 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations (AUC): Whey (103,800 ± 17,000 μmol min/L) > collagen (43,600 ± 10,100 μmol ·min/L) | Whey>Collagen |
| Hamarsland et al. ( | Healthy, trained males and females (74 ± 3.5 yr) | Double-blinded, partial crossover, RCT | Mixed 0–5 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: | Native whey > WPC > milk. |
| Holwerda et al. ( | Healthy, untrained males (67 ± 1 yr) | Double-blinded, RCT | Mixed 0–6 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: Milk + LEU > milk at 0–2 h. | (L-[ |
| Devries et al. ( | Healthy, untrained females (69 ± 1 yr) | Single-blinded, parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | Yes | Peak and overall plasma leucine concentrations: Milk > milk + soy. | Milk +87% > milk + soy + 30% from BLCorrelation between peak plasma leucine concentrations and MPS:( |
| Devries et al. ( | Healthy, untrained females (69 ± 1 yr) | Single-blinded, parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: Milk > WPI at 0–45 min. Milk < WPI at 120–240 min. | WPI > milk, +63% from BL vs. +58% from BL (rest) |
| Reitelseder et al. ( | Healthy, moderately active males (69 ± 1 yr) | Single-blinded, RCT | Myofibrillar 0–3 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: WH > CAS at 15–90 min. | CAS (0.043 ± 0.004%/h) = WH (0.041 ± 0.004%/h) |
| Wilkinson et al. ( | Healthy, untrained females (65 ± 1 yr) | Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–7 h | No | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: Whey > LEAA_6 > LEAA_1.5 at 60–240 min. | LEAA_6=LEAA_1.5=Whey (rest). |
| Borack et al. ( | Healthy, recreationally active males | Double-blinded, RCT | Mixed 0–4 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations (AUC): WPI = PB | WPI (0.09 ± 0.01%) = PB (0.09 ± 0.01%) |
| Bukhari et al. ( | Healthy, untrained females (66 ± 3 yr) | Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations: WP > LEAA at 60–220 min. | WP (0.016 ± 0.003 %/h) = LEAA (0.018 ± 0.004 %/h) (rest) |
| Burd et al. ( | Healthy, active males (72 ± 1 yr) | Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–4 h | Yes | Overall plasma leucine concentrations (mean): Whey (193 ± 17 μM) > micellar casein (175 ± 17 μM). | Whey > micellar casein |
| Dideriksen et al. ( | Healthy, moderately active males and females (68 ± 1 yr) | Parallel RCT | Myofibrillar 0–6.5 h | No | Peak plasma leucine concentrations: Whey (490 ± 32 μmol/L) > Caseinate (282 ± 17 μmol/L) | Whey (0.09 ± 0.005%/h) = Caseinate (0.09 ± 0.003%/h) |
AUC, area under curve; BL, baseline; CAS, caseinate protein; EAA_HL, essential amino acids with high leucine; EAA_LL, essential amino acids with low leucine; LEAA, leucine-enriched essential amino acids; LEU, leucine; MPS, muscle protein synthesis; PB, soy-dairy protein blend; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RM, repetition maximum; WH, whey hydrolysate; WPC, whey protein concentrate; WPI, whey protein isolate.
Values are presented as means ± SE.
Figure 2Synthesis of findings from 29 studies that support or refute the leucine trigger hypothesis to explain the post-prandial regulation of muscle protein synthesis in young and older adults at rest and following exercise, using 31 study arms overall.