Abstract
High protein intake is common in western societies and is often promoted as part of a healthy lifestyle; however, amino-acid-mediated mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signalling in macrophages has been implicated in the pathogenesis of ischaemic cardiovascular disease. In a series of clinical studies on male and female participants (NCT03946774 and NCT03994367) that involved graded amounts of protein ingestion together with detailed plasma amino acid analysis and human monocyte/macrophage experiments, we identify leucine as the key activator of mTOR signalling in macrophages.
We describe a threshold effect of high protein intake and circulating leucine on monocytes/macrophages wherein only protein in excess of ∼25 g per meal induces mTOR activation and functional effects. By designing specific diets modified in protein and leucine content representative of the intake in the general population, we confirm this threshold effect in mouse models and find ingestion of protein in excess of ∼22% of dietary energy requirements drives atherosclerosis in male mice. These data demonstrate a mechanistic basis for the adverse impact of excessive dietary protein on cardiovascular risk.
Source: Nature
Authors: Authors: Xiangyu Zhang, Divya Kapoor, Se-Jin Jeong, Alan Fappi, Jeremiah Stitham, Vasavi Shabrish, Ismail Sergin, Eman Yousif, Astrid Rodriguez-Velez, Yu-Sheng Yeh, Arick Park, Arif Yurdagul Jr, Oren Rom, Slava Epelman, Joel D. Schilling, Marco Sardiello, Abhinav Diwan, Jaehyung Cho, Nathan O. Stitziel, Ali Javaheri, Irfan J. Lodhi, Bettina Mittendorfer & Babak Razani
Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s42255-024-00984-2
Note: Nutrigenomics Institute is not responsible for the opinions expressed in this article.
Photo by Pixabay