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Journal of Nutrition Vol. 119 No. 11 November 1989, pp. 1583-1592
Copyright © 1989 by American Society for Nutrition
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Plasma and Brain Ammonia and Amino Acids in Rats Measured after Feeding 75% Casein or 28% Egg White1

B. A. Semon, P. M. B. Leung, Q. R. Rogers and D. W. Gietzen

Department of Physiological Sciences and Food Intake Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA 95616

Male rats were trained to consume their daily food intake in 3 h. When rats were fed 6% casein for 14 d and were then fed either the 6 or 75% casein diet for 1 d, the plasma and brain ammonia concentrations of rats fed 75% casein were higher (P < 0.05) at 23 h after test meal initiation compared to those of rats fed 6% casein. When rats were fed 6% casein for 13 d and then fed the same 6% casein diet with or without an additional 15% ammonium acetate for an additional 7 d before feeding 75% casein for 1 d, the plasma ammonia concentration of each group was not different, but plasma and brain amino acid concentrations were lower in rats prefed 15% ammonium acetate before the 75% casein diet. When rats were fed 6.8% egg white for 9 d and then fed 27.9% egg white for an additional 7 d, food intake of rats fed the 27.9% egg white diet was lower (P < 0.05, paired t-test) for 4 d compared with that during the 3-d pretest period. When rats were meal-fed the 6.8% egg white diet for 13 d and then fed either the same 6.8% egg white diet or the 27.9% egg white diet for 1 d, plasma ammonia and plasma and brain amino acid concentrations were higher at 5 h after test meal initiation (P < 0.05) in rats fed 27.9% egg white compared to those of rats fed 6.8% egg white. At 23 h after test meal initiation, plasma ammonia, plasma amino acid and most brain amino acid concentrations were lower than they were at 5 h after test meal initiation in rats fed 27.9% egg white.


KEY WORDS: • casein • egg white protein • high dietary protein • energy intake • ammonium acetate • plasma amino acids • plasma ammonia • brain amino acids • brain ammonia • male rats

1 Supported in part by National Institutes of Health grants DK 13252 and AM 07355.

Manuscript received 28 November 1988. Revision accepted 5 June 1989.







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