Changes in Brain Levels of Acidic, Basic, and Neutral Amino Acids After Consumption of Single Meals Containing Various Proportions of Protein

Abstract
Rats fasted overnight were allowed to consume single meals containing 0, 18, or 40% protein or continued to fast; after 2 h, brains and sera were taken and assayed for various amino acids. In general, serum levels of most amino acids were reduced by the 0% protein meal and elevated by the high-protein meal when compared with those associated with fasting conditions. Exceptions were those not diminished by the 0% protein meal (tryptophan, methionine, proline) and those increased (alanine) or decreased (glycine) by all of the test meals. Amino acids exhibiting the broadest normal ranges (estimated by comparing their serum levels after 40% protein with those after 0% protein) were tyrosine, leucine, valine, isoleucine, and proline; serum lysine and histidine, two basic amino acids, also varied more than threefold. Brain levels of lysine, histidine, and some of the large neutral amino acids (LNAAs) also exhibited clear relationships to the protein content of the test meal: those of valine, leucine, and isoleucine were depressed by the 0% protein but increased (compared with 0% protein) when protein was added to the meal: brain tyrosine was increased by all of the test meals in proportion to their protein contents; tryptophan, phenylalanine, and glutamate were increased after the 0% protein meal but not by protein-containing meals; brain lysine, histidine, and methionine were increased after the high-protein meal, and brain alanine was increased slightly by all of the meals. For each of the LNAAs, significant correlations were observed between its brain level in any animal and the ratio of its serum concentration to the sum of the concentrations of its LNAA competitors (for blood-brain barrier transport). For valine, tyrosine, lysine, and histidine, significant correlations were obtained between their brain and serum levels.