Skeletal Muscle Acute and Chronic Metabolic Response to Essential Amino Acid Supplementation in Hypertriglyceridemic Older Adults
Author(s) -
Bryce J. Marquis,
Nicholas M. Hurren,
Eugénia Carvalho,
IlYoung Kim,
Scott Schutzler,
Gohar Azhar,
Robert R. Wolfe,
Elisabet Børsheim
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
current developments in nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 14
ISSN - 2475-2991
DOI - 10.3945/cdn.117.002071
Subject(s) - carnitine , medicine , endocrinology , skeletal muscle , catabolism , metabolite , arginine , citric acid cycle , metabolism , biology , amino acid , chemistry , biochemistry
Supplementation with essential amino acids (EAAs) + arginine is a promising nutritional approach to decrease plasma triglyceride (TG) concentrations, which are an independent risk factor for ischemic heart disease. The objective of this study was to examine the effects of 8 wk of EAA supplementation on skeletal muscle basal metabolite concentrations and changes in metabolic response to acute EAA intake, with an emphasis on mitochondrial metabolism, in adults with elevated TGs to better understand the mechanisms of lowering plasma TGs. Older adults with elevated plasma TG concentrations were given 22 g EAAs to ingest acutely before and after an 8-wk EAA supplementation period. Skeletal muscle biopsy samples were collected before and after acute EAA intake, both pre- and postsupplementation (4 biopsy samples), and targeted metabolomic analyses of organic acids and acylcarnitines were conducted on the specimens. Acute EAA intake resulted in increased skeletal muscle acylcarnitine concentrations associated with oxidative catabolism of the supplement components, with the largest increases found in acylcarnitines of branched-chain amino acid oxidative catabolism, including isovaleryl-carnitine (2200%) and 2-methylbutyryl-carnitine (2400%). The chronic EAA supplementation resulted in a 19% decrease in plasma TGs along with accumulation of long-chain acylcarnitines myristoyl- (90%) and stearoyl- (120%) carnitine in skeletal muscle and increases in succinyl-carnitine (250%) and the late-stage tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates fumarate (44%) and malate (110%). Supplementation with EAAs shows promise as an approach for moderate reduction in plasma TGs. Changes in skeletal muscle metabolites suggest incomplete fatty acid oxidation and increased anaplerosis, which suggests a potential bottleneck in fatty acid metabolism.
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