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Post‐Exercise Consumption of Whole Eggs or Egg Whites Improves Whole Body Leucine Balance but Does Not Differentially Modulate Leucine Kinetics in Resistance‐Trained Young Men
Author(s) -
Martinez Isabel G.,
Vliet Stephan,
Shy Evan L.,
Beals Joseph W.,
Ulanov Alexander V.,
Orlando Mark,
West Daniel W.,
Moore Daniel R.,
Paluska Scott A.,
Burd Nicholas A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.31.1_supplement.652.4
Subject(s) - leucine , ingestion , egg white , medicine , crossover study , endocrinology , anabolism , metabolism , chemistry , amino acid , biology , biochemistry , alternative medicine , pathology , placebo
The consumption of isolated proteins and/or crystalline amino acids enhances the anabolic effect of resistance exercise during recovery. However, the effect of consuming dietary amino acids within their natural nutrient‐dense food matrix to support whole body recovery from resistance exercise has received little attention. Therefore, we determined the effects of whole egg versus egg white ingestion on whole body leucine metabolism in resistance‐trained young males. In crossover trials, six resistance‐trained men (21±1 y; 90±5 kg) received primed constant L‐[1‐ 13 C]leucine infusions with repeated breath and blood samples collected before and 5 h after resistance exercise to determine whole body leucine endogenous rate of appearance (Endo Ra; estimate of protein breakdown), oxidation (OX), non‐oxidative leucine disposal (NOLD; estimate of protein synthesis) and net balance (NB). Immediately after resistance exercise, participants ingested intrinsically L‐[5,5,5‐ 2 H 3 ]leucine labeled whole eggs (18 g protein, 17 g fat; 1.6 g leucine) or egg whites (18 g protein, 0 g fat; 1.6 g leucine) in scrambled form. Endo Ra declined (P<0.001) from fasting values after whole egg (15±1%) and egg white (22±3%) ingestion with no difference between conditions ( P= 0.14). Similarly, OX decreased over the 5 h period after whole egg and egg white ingestion ( P< 0.001) with no differences between conditions (P =0.62). NOLD tended to increase ( P =0.08) after ingestion of whole egg (10±2%) and egg white (6±3%) with no differences between conditions ( P =0.17). As such, NB was negative before exercise but improved similarly (P<0.001) after whole egg (97±6%) and egg white (102±9%) ingestion ( P= 0.36). In summary, there was a similar increase in whole body NB after the ingestion of whole eggs and egg whites, which was primarily modulated by changes in postprandial whole body protein breakdown rather than protein synthesis during post‐exercise recovery. These data demonstrate that consuming high‐quality protein within a complete food matrix is an effective nutritional strategy to improve whole body net protein balance after resistance exercise in trained young men. Support or Funding Information Vision 20/20 Grant, Division of Nutritional Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana ‐ Champaign