Amino Acid Analyses of Plant Foods Used in the Dietary Management of Inherited Amino Acid Disorders

Author:

Ford Suzanne12ORCID,Ilgaz Fatma3,Hawker Sarah4,Cochrane Barbara5,Hill Melanie6,Ellerton Charlotte7,MacDonald Anita8

Affiliation:

1. National Society for Phenylketonuria (NSPKU), Sheffield S12 9ET, UK

2. Southmead Hospital North Bristol Trust, Bristol BS10 5NB, UK

3. Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Faculty of Health Sciences, Hacettepe University, Ankara 06100, Turkey

4. Alta Bioscience, Redditch B98, UK

5. NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Royal Hospital for Children, Glasgow G51 4TF, UK

6. Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Sheffield S5 7AU, UK

7. University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London WC1N 3BG, UK

8. Birmingham Children’s Hospital, Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham B4 6NH, UK

Abstract

A low amino acid (AA)/protein diet is the principal treatment for many inherited amino acid disorders (IMDs). Due to their low AA content, plant foods constitute an essential part of diet therapy. However, data on their AA composition are limited, which leads to an estimation of AA intake from protein content rather than an accurate calculation of true AA intake. This study describes the AA content of a total of 73 plant foods (fruits, n = 12; vegetables, n = 51; and other plant foods, n = 10), with the analysis commissioned by the UK National Society for Phenylketonuria (NSPKU) over 15 years. For all fruits and some vegetables (e.g., rocket, watercress and pea shoots), raw samples were used during analysis. All other vegetables were cooked prior to analysis to represent the usual condition of the food at the time of serving. AA analysis was performed with ion exchange chromatography. The median percentage of protein was 2.0% [0.6–5.4%] for the fruits and vegetables analysed (n = 56), although higher in vegetables than in fruits. Each of the five reported AAs (leucine, lysine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, and methionine) supplied 1–5% per g of protein content. From the heterogeneous range of plant foods analysed, the AA/protein ratios differed significantly (2–5% in fruits and 1–9% in vegetables). There was a strong correlation between the amounts of each of the five AAs in the plant foods, but only a small, moderate correlation between the protein and AA content. Overall, this study provides data on the AA content of several plant foods, which are suitable for patients treated with a low AA/protein diet, including many novel plant options. However, only a limited range of fruits and vegetables were analysed due to the high costs of analysis. Hence, more extensive studies with an increased number of plant foods prepared by different cooking methods and replicate samples are necessary, particularly to examine the relationship between the protein and AA content in depth.

Funder

The National Brain Appeal

NSPKU

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference45 articles.

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