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Nutrition

Relative responses of protein turnover in three different skeletal muscles to dietary lysine deficiency in chicksFootnote1

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Pages 641-650 | Received 10 Jan 1996, Published online: 08 Nov 2007
 

Abstract

1. The effect of lysine deficiency was analysed on muscle protein turnover in 2‐, 3‐ and 4‐week‐old growing broilers. Protein fractional synthesis rates (FSR, in %/d) were measured by a reliable in vivo technique (flooding dose of L‐[4‐3H] phenylalanine) in the Pectoralis major (PM), the Anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and the Sartorius (SART) muscles. Protein fractional breakdown rates (FBR, in %/d) were estimated as the difference between the synthesis rates and the growth rates of tissue protein.

2. Lysine deficiency resulted in significant increases in muscle FSR and FBR. When expressed in absolute rates (g/d), tissue protein deposition was reduced whatever the tissue. This phenomenon was accompanied by decreased protein synthesis (ASR).

3. The protein turnover responsiveness to the lysine deficiency appeared to depend on the studied muscle, since the PM muscle was the most sensitive whereas the SART and ALD muscles presented a lower sensitivity.

Notes

This paper was presented in part in: Proceedings of the 7th Symposium on Protein Metabolism and Nutrition, May 1995, Santarem, Portugal.

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