| Literature DB >> 35215457 |
Anne Daly1, Alex Pinto1, Sharon Evans1, Anita MacDonald1.
Abstract
The use of casein glycomacropeptide (CGMP) as a protein substitute in phenylketonuria (PKU) has grown in popularity. CGMP is derived from κ casein and is a sialic-rich glycophosphopeptide, formed by the action of chymosin during the production of cheese. It comprises 20-25% of total protein in whey products and has key biomodulatory properties. In PKU, the amino acid sequence of CGMP has been adapted by adding the amino acids histidine, leucine, methionine, tyrosine and tryptophan naturally low in CGMP. The use of CGMP compared to mono amino acids (L-AAs) as a protein substitute in the treatment of PKU promises several potential clinical benefits, although any advantage is supported only by evidence from non-PKU conditions or PKU animal models. This review examines if there is sufficient evidence to support the bioactive properties of CGMP leading to physiological benefits when compared to L-AAs in PKU, with a focus on blood phenylalanine control and stability, body composition, growth, bone density, breath odour and palatability.Entities:
Keywords: PKU; amino acids; glycomacropeptide; protein substitute
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35215457 PMCID: PMC8875363 DOI: 10.3390/nu14040807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Functional properties of protein substitutes in PKU.
| Functional Properties | Action | References |
|---|---|---|
| Large neutral amino acids (LNAAs) | Phenylalanine transport from the plasma into the brain is via the LNAA transporter (LAT1). Competition at the blood brain barrier using LNAAs for LAT1 prevents excess phenylalanine from entering the brain, preventing neurocognitive damage | [ |
| LNAAs and cationic amino acids cross the intestinal mucosa via a carrier protein system. The affinity of the amino acids for the intestinal carrier is higher than at the blood brain barrier. By providing LNAAs, there is a decreased entry of phenylalanine across the intestinal mucosa | [ | |
| Normal growth and cellular function | Provide nitrogen to maintain and improve muscle mass and promote growth | [ |
| Provide a source of nitrogen for the synthesis of nitrogen containing compounds | Nitrogen is necessary for the manufacture of small molecular substances, e.g., nitric oxide | [ |
| Provide tyrosine | Phenylalanine to tyrosine conversion is severely limited or absent in classical PKU. Tyrosine becomes a surrogate essential amino acid, and adequate amounts must be provided by protein substitutes to prevent deficiency. Tyrosine is important for the biosynthesis of neurotransmitters, thyroxine and melanin | [ |
| Optimise blood phenylalanine control | Protein substitutes support stabilisation of blood phenylalanine concentrations by providing a complement of amino acids (except phenylalanine) allowing protein anabolism and nitrogen retention. For maximum effectiveness, they must be given frequently throughout the day | [ |
| Prevent nutritional deficiencies | Most protein substitutes are supplemented with vitamins, minerals and trace elements. Adherence with separate vitamin and mineral supplements is poor in patients with PKU | [ |
Studies using CGMP compared to L-amino acid protein substitutes in PKU.
| Author/ | Country | Study Design | Nos of Subjects/ | PKU | Study Intervention | Mean/Median |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Van Calcar [ | United States | Cross-sectiona | 11 | 10 Classical | 100% L-AAs vs. 100% CGMP | L-AAs = 619 |
| MacLeod [ | United States | Cross-sectional | 11 | 11 Classical | 100% L-AAs vs. 100% CGMP | L-AAs = 619 |
| Ney [ | United States | Randomised crossover clinical study | 301 | 20 Classical | 21 days: 100% CGMP | L-AAs = 655 |
| Zaki [ | Egypt | Clinical study | 10 | 10 Classical | 9 weeks: 50% CGMP + 50% L-AA | 100% L-AA s = 490 CGMP 50% + 50% L-AAs = 376, |
| Pinto [ | Portugal | Retrospective longitudinal study | 11 | 6 Classical | Median 20 months: | L-AAs = 516 |
| Daly [ | UK | Prospective clinical study | 21 | 20 Classical | 6 months | L-AAs: pre study 325, end of study 280, |
| Ahring [ | Denmark | Randomised crossover clinical study. | 8 | 8 Classical | PS1 = CGMP, PS2 = L-AAs | L-AAs = 688 |
| Daly [ | UK | Prospective clinical study over 12 months | 48 | 46 Classical | 12 months | L-AAs pre study 315, 52 weeks 340, |
| Daly [ | UK | Randomised control study (RCT) | 18 | 17 Classical | 6-week RCT 2 weeks CGMP 100% no dietary changes (R1) 2 weeks CGMP 100% minus dietary phenylalanine contributed from CGMP (R2) 2 weeks L-AAs nodietary changes (R3) | Median phenylalanine |
| Pena [ | Portugal | Retrospective longitudinal study | 11 | 3 Classical | 29 months | Pre study on L-AAs: |
Legend: PKU phenylketonuria; L-AA, amino acid protein substitute; CGMP, caseinglycomacropeptide; PS, protein substitute; ns, not significant; HPA, hyperphenylalaninemia; F, female; M, male; y, years; m, months; vs, versus.
Studies measuring body composition in children with PKU.
| Author/Year | Number/Age of Subjects | Parameters Measured | Main Outcome | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allen 1996 [ |
Body fat Resting energy expenditure |
No differences in body fat compared to controls No difference in resting energy expenditure | Skinfold measurements provide no information on lean mass. | |
| Dobbelaere 2003 [ |
Weight, height, body mass index (BMI) head circumference Skin folds triceps, biceps, subscapular and suprailiac measurement Body density, body fat, lean mass Blood tyrosine and phenylalanine concentrations Zinc, selenium, thyroid, insulin, growth factor Weighed 4-day dietary intake |
No differences in body composition compared with controls Growth was significantly different from that of reference population No correlation with phenylalanine biochemical bloods or calorie intake | Body mass index measures nutritional status, not body composition | |
| Huemer 2007 [ |
Weight, height, BMI % fat, fat-free mass Blood phenylalanine concentrations |
No differences between groups for the measured parameters Significant correlation between natural protein g/kg/d and fat-free mass | TOBEC rarely used and unknown accuracy | |
| Albersen 2010 [ |
Weight, height, BMI % body fat Blood phenylalanine concentrations |
No difference for weight, height, BMI Body fat significantly higher in PKU despite similar BMI to that of controls Body fat higher in girls >11 y, Body fat increased with weight only in PKU No correlation with blood phenylalanine | 4/20 PKU children were from different ethnic background | |
| Adamczyk 2011 [ |
Weight, height, BMI Lean body mass Fat mass Total bone density Bone mineral content Ratio of bone mineral content/lean body mass Bone markers Data compared with Polish DXA reference values |
Normal body fat and lean body mass Statistically significant differences for ratio of bone mineral content/lean body mass between groups Blood phenylalanine negatively affected bone status | No control group | |
| Douglas 2013 [ |
Weight, height, BMI Body fat |
Normal body fat Lean mass not evaluated Inverse relationship between age and body fat | Mixed PKU phenotype | |
| Rocha 2012 |
Weight, height, BMI Fat mass Lean body mass Body cell mass Muscular mass Phase angle |
No differences in fat mass No differences in lean body mass No differences in body cell, muscular mass or phase angle All classical PKU negative height z-score No differences in height compared to controls in children aged <19 y In PKU group, aged >19 y, height statistically significantly worse than that of controls | Impedance is associated with poor accuracy for individuals and groups | |
|
Blood pressure, amino acids Glucose, insulin Total cholesterol, high-density cholesterol Triglycerides, C- reactive protein, uric acid Assessment of protein substitute and natural protein intake |
Anthropometric parameters no differences to controls Higher triglycerides/high density cholesterol in PKU group Metabolic syndrome no difference compared with controls In PKU subjects, those with central obesity had significantly higher triglycerides/high-density cholesterol compared to those without central obesity | |||
| Doulgeraki 2014 [ |
Lean body mass Fat mass Bone mineral density |
No differences in body composition Weight and BMI significantly different between mild PKU and classical PKU Bone mineral density lower in classical PKU compared to mild and controls Fat mass significantly higher in PKU teenagers with poor phenylalanine control Positive correlation between bone, muscle and fat mass in both groups and fat mass and phenylalanine concentrations | Mixed PKU phenotype | |
| Mazzola 2016 [ |
Weight, height, BMI Fat mass Lean body mass Extracellular mass/body cell mass ratio Phase angle (PA) |
No differences in body fat No differences in lean body mass No effect on time of diagnosis or PKU phenotype | Age at diagnosis variable, some early and late-treated PKU | |
| Sailer 2020 [ |
Weight, height, BMI Fat mass Lean body mass 24 h dietary recall |
Male subjects with PKU had significantly lower lean body mass and more fat mass compared to controls No differences for females and controls when measuring same parameters Age/fat mass positively correlated with blood phenylalanine, Protein substitute negatively correlated with blood phenylalanine Males with PKU had significantly lower height compared with controls No difference in energy intake between the groups | Mixed PKU phenotype 13% on sapropterin | |
| Daly 2021 [ |
Weight, height, BMI Fat mass Lean body mass % body fat |
No correlation or statistically significant differences (after adjusting for age, gender, puberty and blood phenylalanine concentrations) were found between the groups for fat mass, % body fat or lean body mass The change in height z-scores: L-AAs 0, CGMP50 +0.4, CGMP100 +0.7 showed a trend that children in the CGMP100 group were taller, had improved lean body mass with decreased fat mass and % body fat | DXA radiation exposure, whole body bias dependent on size, gender and amount of fat |
Legend: Sapropterin, drug treatment for PKU; BMI, body mass index; PKU, Phenylketonuria; L-AA, amino acid protein substitute; CGMP, caseinglycomacropeptide protein substitute; PS, protein substitute; ns, not significant; F, female; M, male; HPA, hyperphenylalaninemia; y, years