Litcius/Paper detail

Comparable Postprandial Amino Acid and Gastrointestinal Hormone Responses to Beef Steak Cooked Using Different Methods: A Randomised Crossover Trial

Utpal Kumar Prodhan, Shikha Pundir, Vic Shao‐Chih Chiang, Amber M. Milan, Matthew P. G. Barnett, Greg C. Smith, James F. Markworth, Scott O. Knowles, David Cameron‐Smith

2020Nutrients19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cooking changes the texture and tenderness of red meat, which may influence its digestibility, circulatory amino acids (AA) and gastrointestinal (GI) hormonal responses in consumers. In a randomised crossover intervention, healthy males (n = 12) consumed a beef steak sandwich, in which the beef was cooked by either a pan-fried (PF) or sous-vide (SV) method. Plasma AA were measured by ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography (UPLC), while plasma GI hormones were measured using a flow cytometric multiplex array. Following meat ingestion, the circulatory concentrations of some of the essential AA (all the branched-chain AA: leucine, isoleucine and valine; and threonine), some of the nonessential AA (glycine, alanine, tyrosine and proline) and some of the nonproteogenic AA (taurine, citrulline and ornithine) were increased from fasting levels by 120 or 180 min (p < 0.05). There were no differences in circulating AA concentrations between cooking methods. Likewise, of the measured GI hormones, glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) concentrations increased from fasting levels after consumption of the steak sandwich (p < 0.05), with no differences between the cooking methods. In the healthy male adults, protein digestion and circulating GI hormone responses to a beef-steak breakfast were unaltered by the different cooking methods.

Topics & Concepts

ValineCrossover studyFood sciencePeptide YYChemistryTaurineLeucineAmino acidPhenylalaninePostprandialEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineBiochemistryInsulinPlaceboNeuropeptideAlternative medicineNeuropeptide Y receptorReceptorPathologyMeat and Animal Product QualityBiochemical Analysis and Sensing TechniquesMuscle metabolism and nutrition