Amino Acid Balance and Food Intake: Effect of Different Dietary Amino Acid Patterns on the Plasma Amino Acid Pattern of Rats
- 1 April 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 100 (4) , 429-437
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/100.4.429
Abstract
The objective of this study was to test further the aminostatic hypothesis of food intake regulation, i.e., that elevated concentrations of plasma amino acids that cannot be channeled into protein synthesis may serve as a satiety signal for a food intake regulating mechanism and thereby result in depressed food intake. Groups of rats were fed one of a series of diets containing 6% casein and isonitrogenous amounts (0.7%) of incomplete mixtures of amino acids differing greatly in amino acid composition. Mixtures containing large amounts of indispensable amino acids depressed food intake much more than those containing large amounts of dispensable amino acids, as was anticipated, since activities of enzymes for the degradation of indispensable amino acids are ordinarily lower than those for the degradation of dispensable amino acids in animals fed a low protein diet. Relationships between food intake of rats fed ad libitum and plasma amino acid concentrations 5 hours after force-feeding a single meal of each diet were investigated before and after the animals had become adapted to the diets. The coefficient of correlation observed between food intake and plasma total indispensable amino acid concentration (-0.68) indicates that the hypothesis is valid only within certain limits. Concentrations of some amino acids appear to be more critical than others in giving rise to a stimulus that initiates food intake depression, and differences in plasma amino acid pattern cause deviations from the relationship. The slope of the straight line representing plasma total indispensable amino acids versus food intake became steeper as animals became adapted to the diets, presumably because increased capacity for amino acid degradation enabled them to consume more of the diets before the stimulus initiating food intake depression was activated.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Cold Exposure on the Response of Rats to a Dietary Amino Acid ImbalanceJournal of Nutrition, 1969
- Amino acid balance and food intake: effect of previous diet on plasma amino acidsAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1969
- Effect of Prior High Protein Intake on Food Intake, Serine Dehydratase Activity and Plasma Amino Acids of Rats Fed Amino Acid-imbalanced DietsJournal of Nutrition, 1969
- Dietary Effects on Rat Liver Enzymes in Meal-fed RatsJournal of Nutrition, 1968
- Associations among food and protein intake, serine dehydratase, and plasma amino acidsAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1968
- Effect of dietary amino acid pattern on plasma amino acid pattern and food intakeAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1963
- Studies on the Toxicity and Antagonism of Amino Acids for Weanling RatsJournal of Nutrition, 1961
- The Independence of Hydrocortisone and Tryptophan Inductions of Tryptophan PyrrolaseJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1959
- Digestive SystemAnnual Review of Physiology, 1957
- Utilization of amino acids by chicksArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1954