1972 年 36 巻 8 号 p. 1269-1276
The influence of protein quality on the growth-depressing effect of excessive amount of 12 individual essential and semiessential amino acids was examined. Growing rats were fed for 3 weeks diets containing either 10.5% egg albumin or 11.6%, wheat gluten (equivalent to the protein content of a 10% casein diet) supplemented with 5% of each of the L-amino acids. In general, the pattern of growth depression produced by the addition of excess amino acids to the egg albumin or the wheat gluten diet was similar to that of the case of casein diet obtained previously under the same experimental conditions. however, the extent of these effects was dependent not only upon the kind of amino acid supplemented with but also upon the source of protein used, and the depressing effect of each of excess amino acids added to the wheat gluten diet was usually severer than those added to casein and egg albumin diets. No evidence was noted of any striking changes in the liver protein and nucleic acid concentrations by either diets, but total liver protein, RNA and DNA contents were decreased in some amino acid groups of the egg albumin diet and in all amino acid groups of the wheat gluten diet except the lysine addition. The free amino acid level in plasma generally showed extreme elevation for the amino acid supplemented in excess in the diet, and in most cases the extent of the elevation was correlated with the growth depression.
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