Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Acute exercise increases the incorporation of dietary amino acids into de novo myofibrillar proteins after a single meal in controlled laboratory studies in males. It is unclear if this extends to free-living settings or is influenced by training or sex. Over 24 h in a free-living setting, the investigators determined the effect of training status and sex on dietary phenylalanine incorporation into contractile myofibrillar and noncontractile sarcoplasmic proteins after exercise.


Clinical Trial Description

Exogenous (e.g. diet-derived) amino acids increase muscle protein synthesis and provide the building blocks for growth. While traditional infusion studies can measure the synthesis of total mixed muscle or fraction-specific protein synthetic rates, the metabolic fate of dietary amino acids can only be assessed by measuring the incorporation of a labelled amino acid (i.e. L-[1-13C]phenylalanine) into muscle protein through the oral ingestion of a intrinsically labelled food source (e.g. milk protein) . This technique has revealed in controlled laboratory settings that dietary amino acids, and not endogenous amino acids recycled from intracellular protein breakdown, may be preferentially utilized as precursors for muscle and whole body protein synthesis Therefore, it is important to characterize the incorporation of diet-derived amino acids over a 24-h post-exercise recovery period to determine how RE influences their utilization as precursors for the synthesis of new muscle proteins. The investigators are unaware of any studies that have examined the utilization of dietary amino acids for de novo muscle protein synthesis in females, highlighting an urgent need to rectify the sex-disparity in exercise-related research. Protein requirements during resistance training have been suggested to be highest at training onset with evidence suggesting moderate daily intakes (~1.2-1.4 g·kg·d-1) can support chronic adaptations, although recent suggestions are that slightly higher intakes (~1.6 g·kg·d-1) may optimize lean mass growth. Resistance training is associated with a reduction in whole-body protein turnover but an increased net protein balance suggesting a greater efficiency of whole-body amino acid utilization with training in males , although whether this also extends to females is unknown. Acute RE and chronic training has been reported to increase intracellular amino acid recycling in the fasted state, which would be consistent with an increased amino acid efficiency. To date, however, no study has investigated whether the post-exercise incorporation of dietary amino acids into myofibrillar and sarcoplasmic proteins in a free-living setting is modified by training and/or sex. The primary aim of the present study was to determine the dietary fate of amino acids into contractile myofibrillar and noncontractile sarcoplasmic muscle proteins after acute RE in the untrained and trained state over 24 h in a free-living setting. The investigators hypothesized that, irrespective of sex, acute RE would increase dietary amino acid incorporation in myofibrillar proteins in the untrained state with training leading to an attenuated increase suggestive of a reduced reliance on dietary amino acids in the trained state. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04887883
Study type Observational
Source University of Toronto
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date January 1, 2019
Completion date September 1, 2019

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT03440879 - Androgen Deprivation Therapy Muscle Protein Metabolism and Blood Glucose N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05936424 - Menstrual Cycle Phase Based Training N/A
Completed NCT05580263 - Different Order of Concurrent Training on Improving Visceral Adipose Tissue and Insulin Resistance. N/A
Recruiting NCT05574205 - Dietary Protein Quality for Skeletal Muscle Anabolism in Older Adults N/A
Recruiting NCT05482178 - The Association of Resistance Exercise With the Inflammasome Activation in Obesity Subjects N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05347667 - Menstrual Cycle Phase Muscle Protein Synthesis N/A
Recruiting NCT06038656 - Effects of Exercise and Galactooligosaccharide Supplementation on Inflammation and Iron Absorption (FexerGOS) N/A
Recruiting NCT05422300 - A 'Non-Invasive' Breath Test to Determine Anabolic Sensitivity in Females N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06205147 - Effects of Elastic Band Resistance Exercise on Muscle Strength and Depression in Hospitalized Elderly. N/A
Recruiting NCT06209424 - Modified Breath Test to Determine Anabolic Sensitivity Across Physical Activity States N/A
Completed NCT05014035 - Feasibility of a Hybrid Delivery of Home-based Cluster Set Resistance Training in Lung Cancer N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05110092 - Breathing-based Leg Resistance Exercise Improves Wound Healing, Blood Sugar and Quality of Life for Diabetic Foot Ulcers N/A
Completed NCT04028726 - Skeletal Muscle Protein Synthesis: Traditional and Cluster Sets N/A
Completed NCT04000893 - Effect of Aerobic or Resistance Exercise on the Endothelial Response in Post-acute Myocardial Infarction Patients Submitted to Angioplasty N/A