Investigating the Digestibility, Bioavailability and Utilization of Protein Blends in Older Adults Using a Dual Stable Isotope Tracer Technique
Jake Cox, Bethan E. Phillips, James Bunce, Thomas Smart, Joshua Wall, Hannah Crossland, Daniel J. Wilkinson, Kenneth Smith, Philip J. Atherton

TL;DR
This study finds that the amount of protein, not its source, is most important for muscle protein synthesis in older adults.
Contribution
The study introduces a dual stable isotope tracer method to compare protein blends in older adults.
Findings
No differences in digestibility were found between different protein blends.
Plasma essential amino acids increased similarly across all protein blends.
Muscle protein synthesis rates were not significantly different between blends.
Abstract
Objectives: The impact of combining animal and plant protein sources on digestibility is unclear, despite their increasing clinical use. Using a non-invasive dual stable isotope tracer approach, we assessed the digestibility, bioavailability and utilization of distinct protein blends in older adults, and associated plasma amino acid profiles and muscle protein synthesis (MPS) rates. Methods: Thirty-two older men (69 ± 3 y) consumed one of four protein blends (A (51:49, casein/soy); B and C (35:25:20:20, whey/casein/soy/pea); D (80:20, casein/whey)) alongside primed constant infusions of [1,2-13C2] leucine for 8 h. Arterialized blood and vastus lateralis muscle biopsies were collected during a trickle feed protocol with all blends providing 20 g total protein, universally labeled 13C-spirulina, and 2H-cell free amino acid mix to determine digestibility. This trial was registered at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle metabolism and nutrition · Diet and metabolism studies · Nutrition and Health in Aging
