Choi Sujean, Disilvio Briana, Fernstrom Madelyn H, Fernstrom John D
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh PA 15213, United States.
Physiol Behav. 2009 Aug 4;98(1-2):156-62. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2009.05.004. Epub 2009 May 18.
Carbohydrate ingestion raises tryptophan uptake and serotonin synthesis in rat brain. The addition of protein is generally believed only to block such increases. However, some recent evidence suggests dietary protein may not be limited to this action. In the present studies, we fed rats single meals containing one of 5 proteins (zein, wheat gluten, soy protein isolate, casein, lactalbumin, 17% by weight) or no protein, and killed them 2.5 h later, 30 min after the injection of m-hydroxybenzylhydrazine, to allow serotonin and catecholamine synthesis rates to be measured in brain. Blood and cerebral cortex samples were analyzed for tryptophan and other large, neutral amino acids; 5-hydroxytryptophan and dihydroxyphenylalanine were measured in hypothalamus, hippocampus and cerebral cortex as indices of serotonin and catecholamine synthesis, respectively. An 8-fold variation occurred in cortex tryptophan: a marked decline followed zein ingestion, and modest reductions after casein or gluten. A large rise in cortex tryptophan occurred after lactalbumin consumption, and smaller increases after soy protein or carbohydrate (no protein). In the brain regions examined, a 4-8-fold range in serotonin synthesis occurred which closely followed the tryptophan alterations. No effects were observed in regional catecholamine synthesis rates. Cortical concentrations of leucine showed small changes; leucine has been linked to mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) signaling in brain circuits regulating food intake. The data suggest that tryptophan concentrations and serotonin synthesis in brain neurons are remarkably sensitive to which protein is present in a meal. Conceivably, this relationship might inform the brain about the nutritional quality of the protein ingested.
摄入碳水化合物会提高大鼠大脑中色氨酸的摄取量和血清素的合成。一般认为,添加蛋白质只会阻止这种增加。然而,最近的一些证据表明,膳食蛋白质的作用可能不止于此。在本研究中,我们给大鼠喂食单餐,餐食包含5种蛋白质(玉米醇溶蛋白、小麦面筋、大豆分离蛋白、酪蛋白、乳白蛋白,重量占比17%)中的一种或不含蛋白质,2.5小时后,即在注射间羟基苄基肼30分钟后将其处死,以便测量大脑中血清素和儿茶酚胺的合成速率。分析血液和大脑皮层样本中的色氨酸及其他大的中性氨基酸;分别在下丘脑、海马体和大脑皮层中测量5-羟色氨酸和二羟基苯丙氨酸,作为血清素和儿茶酚胺合成的指标。大脑皮层色氨酸含量出现了8倍的变化:摄入玉米醇溶蛋白后显著下降,摄入酪蛋白或面筋后略有降低。摄入乳白蛋白后大脑皮层色氨酸大幅上升,摄入大豆蛋白或碳水化合物(无蛋白质)后有较小幅度的增加。在所检测的脑区中,血清素合成出现了4至8倍的变化范围,这与色氨酸的变化密切相关。未观察到区域儿茶酚胺合成速率有变化。大脑皮层中亮氨酸的浓度有微小变化;亮氨酸与调节食物摄入的脑回路中的mTOR(哺乳动物雷帕霉素靶蛋白)信号传导有关。数据表明,大脑神经元中的色氨酸浓度和血清素合成对餐食中所含的蛋白质非常敏感。可以想象,这种关系可能会让大脑了解所摄入蛋白质的营养质量。