Zheng Yan, Ceglarek Uta, Huang Tao, Li Lerong, Rood Jennifer, Ryan Donna H, Bray George A, Sacks Frank M, Schwarzfuchs Dan, Thiery Joachim, Shai Iris, Qi Lu
Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA;
Institute of Laboratory Medicine, Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, University Hospital Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;
Am J Clin Nutr. 2016 Feb;103(2):505-11. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.115.117689. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
Circulating amino acids, such as branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) and aromatic amino acids (AAAs), have been associated with diabetes risk; however, little is known about how a long-term dietary intervention for weight loss affects circulating amino acids.
We examined the effects of weight-loss diets on long-term changes in plasma amino acids and the associations of these changes with weight loss and the improvement of insulin resistance.
We repeatedly measured plasma amino acid profiles over 2 y in overweight or obese participants from 2 randomized, dietary intervention, weight-loss trials [774 subjects from the POUNDS LOST (Preventing Overweight Using Novel Dietary Strategies Trial) and 318 subjects from the DIRECT (Dietary Intervention Randomized Controlled Trial)].
Intervention diets consistently lowered most of the amino acid concentrations, including BCAAs and AAAs, in both trials. In the POUNDS LOST, average-protein diets (15% of daily energy) showed stronger effects than did high-protein diets (25% of daily energy) on reducing concentrations of the diabetes-associated BCAA valine at 6 mo independent of the weight change. In both trials, weight loss was directly related to the concurrent reduction of the BCAAs leucine and isoleucine, the AAAs tyrosine and phenylalanine, and 4 other amino acids. For example, per kilogram of weight loss, there was a 0.04-SD decrease in log tyrosine (∼0.6 μmol/L) in both trials. In addition, we showed that reductions in alanine and the AAA tyrosine were significantly related to improved insulin resistance (measured with the use of the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance), independent of weight loss, in both trials (both P < 0.05). For example, per 1-SD decrease in log tyrosine (∼17 μmol/L), there was a 0.04-SD (∼3%) improvement in insulin resistance in the POUNDS LOST and a 0.13-SD (∼8%) improvement in insulin resistance in the DIRECT.
Our findings underscore the potential importance of dietary interventions in improving amino acid profiles (i.e., reducing diabetes risk-enhancing amino acid concentrations) along with and beyond weight loss. The POUNDS LOST and the DIRECT were registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00072995 and NCT00160108, respectively.
循环氨基酸,如支链氨基酸(BCAAs)和芳香族氨基酸(AAAs),与糖尿病风险相关;然而,关于长期减肥饮食干预如何影响循环氨基酸,我们知之甚少。
我们研究了减肥饮食对血浆氨基酸长期变化的影响,以及这些变化与体重减轻和胰岛素抵抗改善之间的关联。
我们在两项随机饮食干预减肥试验中,对超重或肥胖参与者进行了2年的血浆氨基酸谱重复测量[来自“POUNDS LOST(使用新型饮食策略预防超重试验)”的774名受试者和来自“DIRECT(饮食干预随机对照试验)”的318名受试者]。
在两项试验中,干预饮食均持续降低了大多数氨基酸浓度,包括支链氨基酸和芳香族氨基酸。在“POUNDS LOST”试验中,平均蛋白质饮食(占每日能量的15%)在6个月时,对降低与糖尿病相关的支链氨基酸缬氨酸浓度的效果,比高蛋白饮食(占每日能量的25%)更强,且与体重变化无关。在两项试验中,体重减轻都与支链氨基酸亮氨酸和异亮氨酸、芳香族氨基酸酪氨酸和苯丙氨酸以及其他4种氨基酸的同时减少直接相关。例如,在两项试验中,每减轻1千克体重,log酪氨酸(约0.6μmol/L)下降0.04标准差。此外,我们还表明,在两项试验中,丙氨酸和芳香族氨基酸酪氨酸的减少与胰岛素抵抗改善(使用胰岛素抵抗稳态模型评估)显著相关,且与体重减轻无关(均P<0.05)。例如,在“POUNDS LOST”试验中,log酪氨酸每下降1标准差(约17μmol/L),胰岛素抵抗改善0.04标准差(约3%);在“DIRECT”试验中,胰岛素抵抗改善0.13标准差(约8%)。
我们的研究结果强调了饮食干预在改善氨基酸谱(即降低增加糖尿病风险的氨基酸浓度)方面的潜在重要性,这一作用不仅体现在减肥过程中,还体现在减肥之外。“POUNDS LOST”和“DIRECT”试验分别在clinicaltrials.gov上注册,注册号为NCT00072995和NCT00160108。