Measurement of the Rate of Protein Synthesis in Muscle of Postabsorptive Young Men by Injection of a ‘Flooding Dose’ of [1-13C]leucine
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Clinical Science
- Vol. 77 (3) , 329-336
- https://doi.org/10.1042/cs0770329
Abstract
1. The ''flooding dose'' technique for measuring the rate of protein synthesis in tissues in vivo involves the injection of a large amount of unlabelled amino acid together with the tracer to minimize differences in isotopic enrichment of the free amino acid in plasma and tissue compartments. This approach has been investigated in human muscle by taking biopsies from postabsorptive male volunteers given [1-13C]leucine. 2. Intravenous injection of 4 g of unlabelled leucine resulted in a rapid rise in free leucine concentration of seven- to eleven-fold in plasma and five-fold in muscle. Values were still elevated by two-fold after 2 h. 3. Five minutes after injection of [1-13C]leucine (0.05 g/kg) the isotopic enrichment of plasma leucine was 82% that of the injected material, falling to 44% at 120 min. The enrichment of free leucine in sequential muscle biopsies was close to that in plasma and almost identical to that for plasma .alpha.-ketoisocaproate. 4. The rate of protein synthesis was determined from the increase in leucine enrichment in protein of muscle biopsies taken before and 90 min after injection of [1-13C]leucine (0.05 g/kg: 19 or 39 atom% excess) and the average plasma .alpha.-ketoisocaproate enrichment over this period (taken to represent muscle free leucine). The mean rate of muscle protein synthesis in 10 subjects was 1.95 (SEM 0.12) %/day. Rates of protein synthesis calculated from plasma leucine as precursor enrichment were only 5% lower than those calculated from plasma .alpha.-ketoisocaproate. 5. It is concluded that a flooding dose of 13C-labelled amino acid is a useful and convenient technique for determining the rate of protein synthesis in tissues of human volunteers and patients.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protein synthesis and retention in some tissues of the young pig as influenced by dietary protein intake after early-weaning. Possible connection to the energy metabolismReproduction Nutrition Développement, 1986
- Comparison of different techniques for estimating rates of protein synthesis in vivo in healthy and bacteraemic ratsBiochemical Journal, 1985
- Muscle Protein Synthesis Measured by Stable Isotope Techniques in Man: The Effects of Feeding and FastingClinical Science, 1982
- Regulation of protein accumulation in cultured cellsBiochemical Journal, 1982
- Relationship of plasma leucine and α-ketoisocaproate during a L-[1-13C]leucine infusion in man: A method for measuring human intracellular leucine tracer enrichmentMetabolism, 1982
- Failure of leucine to stimulate protein synthesis in vivoBiochemical Journal, 1982
- A rapid and convenient technique for measuring the rate of protein synthesis in tissues by injection of [3H]phenylalanineBiochemical Journal, 1980
- The effect of starvation on the rate of protein synthesis in rat liver and small intestineBiochemical Journal, 1979
- ASSESSMENT OF PROTEIN TURNOVER IN PERFUSED RAT-LIVER - EVIDENCE FOR AMINO-ACID COMPARTMENTATION FROM DIFFERENTIAL LABELING OF FREE AND TRANSFER-RNA-BOUND VALINE1976
- THE EXPERIMENTAL INDUCTION IN MAN OF SENSITIVITY TO LEUCINE HYPOGLYCEMIA*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1963