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This research study is investigating if consuming more of one amino acid (arginine) influences the digestion and absorption of another amino acid (lysine) due to competition in digestion, in a healthy adult population.
Full description
Background:
Protein is made up of building blocks called amino acids. Some amino acids, including Lysine, cannot be made in the body and must be obtained from diet, and these are called essential amino acids.
Pyridoxine dependent deficiency (PDE) is a rare condition caused by the body's inability to properly breakdown lysine. This is due to a missing enzyme, α- aminoadipic semi-aldehyde dehydrogenase (α-AASAD) also known as antiquitin (ATQ), involved in lysine breakdown. When the enzyme is missing and/or not functioning properly, it increases the level of byproducts of lysine breakdown that may result in seizures babies and young children and affect brain development. As with many other similar conditions, a low lysine diet may be helpful for some patients, but can pose a significant burden on the patient and the families.
More recently, animal experiments have shown that the body's ability to absorb lysine from the diet can be altered by adding more of another "competitive" amino acid, in this case, arginine. This is because lysine and arginine share the same transport system in the body.
Therefore, the current study is designed to describe the application of 13C-lysine to explore the changes in lysine breakdown caused by varying (graded) amounts of arginine supplementation in young adult male participants.
Study design:
Two adult male subjects aged 19-50 y will be recruited to participate in 6 graded doses of arginine intakes, in addition to a test diet which will provide the lysine at normal intake of 110mg/kg/d. Lysine intake levels, will be determined based on subject age and body weight and will remain constant for the entire study period. The recommended dietary protein intake (DRI) will be maintained throughout the study.
A thorough pre-study assessment will be performed and all subjects will be screened by questionnaire for chronic diseases, physical activity and dietary habits. Lean body mass or skeletal muscle mass (Bioelectrical impedance Analysis) will be measured. Subjects will be ensured to be free of chronic diseases.
Arginine Test Intakes:
Graded arginine excess intake will start at 50mg/kg/d on study day 1 followed by 100 mg/kg/d on study day 2 till the level reaches 300mg/kg/d on study day 6.
The arginine test intakes will be provided in the form of protein shakes containing a stable isotope, and then oxidation of this isotope will be measured to determine whether arginine that will competitively inhibit lysine uptake.
To measure how the the body responds to the test diet we will collect seven breath samples, two urine samples and one blood sample during each study day.
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You are not in good health or have a metabolic, neurological, genetic, or immune disorder, including diabetes and hypertension
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5 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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