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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 292: E1340-E1347, 2007. First published January 16, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpendo.00488.2006
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Determination of protein replacement rates by deuterated water: validation of underlying assumptions

Emmanuelle Belloto,1 Frédérique Diraison,1 Alexandra Basset,2 Gwenola Allain,1 Pauline Abdallah,1 and Michel Beylot1,2

1Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U499, Faculté Réne Theodore Hyacinthe, Laennec, and 2ANIPHY, Faculté Rockefeller, University Claude Bernard Lyon1, Lyon, France

Submitted 11 September 2006 ; accepted in final form 5 January 2007

H2O administration has recently been proposed as a simple and convenient method to measure protein synthesis rates. 2H2O administration results in deuterium labeling of free amino acids such as alanine, and incorporation into proteins of labeled alanine can then be used to measure protein synthesis rates. We examined first whether during 2H2O administration plasma free alanine enrichment is a correct estimate of the enrichment in the tissue amino acid pools used for protein synthesis. We found that, after 2H2O administration, deuterium labeling in plasma free alanine equilibrated rapidly with body water, and stable enrichment values were obtained within 20 min. Importantly, oral administration of 2H2O induced no difference of labeling between portal and peripheral circulation except for the initial 10 min after a loading dose. The kinetics of free alanine labeling were comparable in various tissues (liver, skeletal muscle, heart) and in plasma with identical plateau values. We show next that increased glycolytic rate or absorption of unlabeled amino acids from ingested meals do not modify alanine labeling. Calculated synthesis rates of mixed proteins were much higher (20- to 70-fold) in plasma and liver than in muscle and heart. Last, comparable replacement rates of apoB100-VLDL were obtained in humans by using the kinetics of incorporation into apoB100 of infused labeled leucine or of alanine labeled by 2H2O administration. All of these results support 2H2O as a safe, reliable, useful, and convenient tracer for studies of protein synthesis, including proteins with slow turnover rate.

protein synthesis; stable isotope; mass spectrometry; alanine



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Beylot, INSERM U499, Faculté RTH Laennec, 7 Rue G Paradin, 69008 Lyon, France (e-mail: beylot{at}sant\|[eacute]\|.univ-lyon1.fr)




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