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,1 United States Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service Children's Nutrition Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030; and 2 United States Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service Growth Biology Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland 20705
To
differentiate the effect of somatotropin (ST) treatment on protein
metabolism in the hindquarter (HQ) and portal-drained viscera (PDV),
growing swine (n = 20) treated with ST (0 or 150 µg · kg
1 · day
1)
for 7 days were infused intravenously with
NaH13CO3 and
[2H5]phenylalanine and enterally with
[1-13C]phenylalanine while in the fed state. Arterial,
portal venous, and vena cava whole blood samples, breath samples, and
blood flow measurements were obtained for determination of tissue and
whole body phenylalanine kinetics under steady-state conditions. In the
fed state, ST treatment decreased whole body phenylalanine flux,
oxidation, and protein degradation without altering protein synthesis,
resulting in an improvement in whole body net protein balance. Blood
flow to the HQ (+80%), but not to the PDV, was increased with ST
treatment. In the HQ and PDV, ST increased phenylalanine uptake (+44
and +23%, respectively) and protein synthesis (+43 and +41%,
respectively), with no effect on protein degradation. In ST-treated and
control pigs, phenylalanine was oxidized in the PDV (34-43% of
enteral and arterial sources) but not the HQ. In both treatment groups,
dietary (40%) rather than arterial (10%) extraction of phenylalanine
predominated in gut amino acid metabolism, whereas localized blood flow
influenced HQ amino acid metabolism. The results indicate that ST
increases protein anabolism in young, growing swine by increasing
protein synthesis in the HQ and PDV, with no effect on protein
degradation. Differing results between the whole body and the HQ and
PDV suggest that the effect of ST treatment on protein metabolism is
tissue specific.
growth hormone; protein synthesis; protein degradation; amino acid kinetics; muscle
Deceased 13 August 2002.
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