Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, British Columbia, Canada; British Columbia Children's Hospital Research Institute, British Columbia Children's Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, British Columbia, Canada.
Adv Nutr. 2023 Jul;14(4):885-894. doi: 10.1016/j.advnut.2023.04.004. Epub 2023 Apr 14.
Individual amino acids are widely popular as supplements because of various perceived and real health benefits. However, currently, there are no recommendations set by national health agencies for tolerable upper intake levels (UL) for amino acids because of a lack of well-conducted human dose-response trials. In the past decade, under the initiative of the International Council on Amino Acid Science, a nonprofit organization, a series of UL human clinical studies were conducted. The goal of this narrative review is to summarize the studies on 6 essential amino acids (leucine, tryptophan, methionine, lysine, histidine, and phenylalanine), 2 nonessential amino acids (arginine and serine), and 2 nonproteinogenic amino acids (ornithine and citrulline) and provide the first set of ULs. A brief background of the concept of the DRI framework of UL, the concept of UL for amino acids, and a perspective of the results are also provided. The data suggest that in relatively healthy adult individuals, the tested amino acids are well tolerated, and ULs, or the no-observed-adverse-effect-level (NOAEL), lowest-observed-adverse-effect-level (LOAEL), can be determined. The ULs were for leucine-young (35 g/d), tryptophan (4.5 g/d), and leucine-elderly (30 g/d); NOAEL and LOAEL for methionine at 3.2 and 6.4 g/d, respectively; NOAEL for arginine (30 g/d); NOAEL and LOAEL for lysine at 6 and 7.5 g/d, respectively; NOAEL and LOAEL for histidine at 8 and 12 g/d, respectively; and NOAEL for phenylalanine (12 g/d), serine (12 g/d), ornithine (12 g/d) and citrulline (24 g/d). This first set of human UL data are hoped to help national and international agencies set safety standards for supplemental amino acids.
氨基酸作为补充剂因其各种被认为和真实存在的健康益处而广受欢迎。然而,由于缺乏精心设计的人体剂量反应试验,目前国家健康机构尚未为氨基酸设定可耐受的最高摄入量 (UL) 推荐值。在过去十年中,在非营利组织国际氨基酸科学协会的倡议下,进行了一系列 UL 人体临床研究。本综述的目的是总结关于 6 种必需氨基酸(亮氨酸、色氨酸、蛋氨酸、赖氨酸、组氨酸和苯丙氨酸)、2 种非必需氨基酸(精氨酸和丝氨酸)和 2 种非蛋白氨基酸(鸟氨酸和瓜氨酸)的研究,并提供第一批 UL 值。还简要介绍了 UL 制定的 DRIs 框架概念、氨基酸 UL 概念以及对结果的看法。数据表明,在相对健康的成年人中,所测试的氨基酸具有良好的耐受性,可以确定 UL 或无观察到不良效应水平(NOAEL)、最低观察到不良效应水平(LOAEL)。亮氨酸(年轻人)UL 值为 35 g/d,亮氨酸(老年人)UL 值为 30 g/d,色氨酸 UL 值为 4.5 g/d;蛋氨酸的 NOAEL 和 LOAEL 分别为 3.2 g/d 和 6.4 g/d;精氨酸的 NOAEL 为 30 g/d;赖氨酸的 NOAEL 和 LOAEL 分别为 6 g/d 和 7.5 g/d;组氨酸的 NOAEL 和 LOAEL 分别为 8 g/d 和 12 g/d;苯丙氨酸 UL 值为 12 g/d,丝氨酸 UL 值为 12 g/d,鸟氨酸 UL 值为 12 g/d,瓜氨酸 UL 值为 24 g/d。这组人体 UL 数据有望帮助国家和国际机构为补充氨基酸制定安全标准。