The Skeletal Muscle Anabolic Response to Plant- versus Animal-Based Protein

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  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18439

    The Skeletal Muscle Anabolic Response to Plant- versus Animal-Based Protein

    The Skeletal Muscle Anabolic Response to Plant- versus Animal-Based Protein Consumption
    Stephan van Vliet, Nicholas A Burd, Luc JC van Loon
    The Journal of Nutrition, Volume 145, Issue 9, September 2015, Pages 1981–1991, https://doi.org/10.3945/jn.114.204305
    Published:
    29 July 2015
    Article history


    Abstract

    Clinical and consumer market interest is increasingly directed toward the use of plant-based proteins as dietary components aimed at preserving or increasing skeletal muscle mass. However, recent evidence suggests that the ingestion of the plant-based proteins in soy and wheat results in a lower muscle protein synthetic response when compared with several animal-based proteins. The possible lower anabolic properties of plant-based protein sources may be attributed to the lower digestibility of plant-based sources, in addition to greater splanchnic extraction and subsequent urea synthesis of plant protein–derived amino acids compared with animal-based proteins. The latter may be related to the relative lack of specific essential amino acids in plant- as opposed to animal-based proteins. Furthermore, most plant proteins have a relatively low leucine content, which may further reduce their anabolic properties when compared with animal proteins. However, few studies have actually assessed the postprandial muscle protein synthetic response to the ingestion of plant proteins, with soy and wheat protein being the primary sources studied. Despite the proposed lower anabolic properties of plant vs. animal proteins, various strategies may be applied to augment the anabolic properties of plant proteins. These may include the following: 1) fortification of plant-based protein sources with the amino acids methionine, lysine, and/or leucine; 2) selective breeding of plant sources to improve amino acid profiles; 3) consumption of greater amounts of plant-based protein sources; or 4) ingesting multiple protein sources to provide a more balanced amino acid profile. However, the efficacy of such dietary strategies on postprandial muscle protein synthesis remains to be studied. Future research comparing the anabolic properties of a variety of plant-based proteins should define the preferred protein sources to be used in nutritional interventions to support skeletal muscle mass gain or maintenance in both healthy and clinical populations.
    plant protein, animal protein, muscle mass, vegetarian, exercise, aging
    Topic:

    methionine leucine lysine skeletal muscles plant proteins plants postprandial period wheat ingestion muscle mass

    Issue Section:
    Critical Review
    ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle
  • Magnesium
    Vet
    • Dec 2009
    • 367

    #2
    Good read. You can get a complete profile of amino acids from plant based proteins and they will get the job done, but animal based are best IMO. Plus plant based meats just aren't very tasty and my smoker turns meat into something magical.

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