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Title: Threonine requirement of healthy adults, derived with a 24-h indicator amino acid balance technique. Author: Borgonha S, Regan MM, Oh SH, Condon M, Young VR. Journal: Am J Clin Nutr; 2002 Apr; 75(4):698-704. PubMed ID: 11916756. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Because we question the validity of the 1985 FAO/ WHO/UNU upper requirement for threonine of 7 mg x kg(-1) x d(-1), we proposed a tentative mean requirement of 15 mg x kg(-1) x d(-1). OBJECTIVE: Our goal was to assess threonine adequacy at 3 test intakes and the consequences of a 6-d compared with a 13-d dietary adaptation phase. DESIGN: We used a 24-h indicator amino acid balance technique ([1-(13)C]leucine as indicator) to assess the threonine requirement. Fifteen healthy adults were randomly assigned to receive 7, 15, or 46 mg threonine x kg(-1) x d(-1) and were studied after 6 and 13 d of adaptation to the experimental diets. Diets were based on an L-amino acid mixture in which the threonine content was varied. At 1700 on days 6 and 13, a 24-h intravenous [(13)C]leucine tracer infusion protocol was begun to assess leucine oxidation and daily leucine balances. RESULTS: There was no detectable effect of duration of dietary adaptation in leucine oxidation or balance, but the 24-h leucine oxidation and balances differed significantly between the 7-mg intake and each of the 2 higher intakes (P < 0.05). The latter were not significantly different. The 24-h leucine oxidation rate decreased across threonine intakes (P < 0.01 for main effect of diet, independent of infusion day). Leucine oxidation was highly correlated (r = 0.80) between the 2 dietary adaptation phases across all test intakes. CONCLUSION: The 1985 FAO/WHO/UNU threonine recommendation is inadequate, and 15 mg x kg(-1) x d(-1) is sufficient to achieve mean indicator (leucine) amino acid balance.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]