Regulation of Amino Acid Intake in the Rat: Self-Selection of Methionine and Lysine
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概要
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A study was undertaken to measure the ability of rats to regulate amino acid intake by means of a self-selection method. Weanling rats were simultaneously offered a choice between a 10% casein diet or a 10% amino acid mixture diet lacking methionine or lysine and a 10 casein diet containing different levels of methionine or lysine over 2 weeks. Weight gain and food consumption of rats allowed a choice between the two diets were much greater than those of animals fed on the fixed diets with high levels of methionine or lysine added, and the self-selecting rats had the ability to take in amounts of methionine or lysine appropriate to meet the requirement. Methionine intakes of self-selecting rats were kept to a relatively narrow range (41-100 mg/day), but lysine intakes of self-selecting rats were wide-ranging (86-300 mg/day). It was demonstrated that methionine or lysine intake is closely regulated in rats given a choice of diets containing varied levels of methionine or lysine.
- 財団法人 学会誌刊行センターの論文
著者
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村松 敬一郎
Department of Agricultural Chemistry, Faculty fo Agriculture, Shizuoka University
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石田 眞裕
Department of Agricultural Chemistry, Faculty fo Agriculture, Shizuoka University
関連論文
- Regulation of Amino Acid Intake in the Rat: Self-Selection of Methionine and Lysine
- Regulation of essential fatty acid intake in the rat: Self-selection of corn oil.