Exogenous and endogenous nitrogen flow rates and level of protein hydrolysis in the human jejunum after [ 15 N]milk and [ 15 N]yoghurt ingestion

  • Gaudichon C
  • Mahé S
  • Roos N
  • et al.
60Citations
Citations of this article
17Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Milk and yoghurt proteins were 15 N-labelled in order to measure the flow rate of exogenous N during digestion in the human intestine. After fasting overnight, sixteen healthy volunteers, each with a naso-jejunal tube, ingested either [ 15 N]milk ( n 7) or [ 15 N]yoghurt ( n 9). Jejunal samples were collected every 20 min for 4 h. A significant stimulation of endogenous N secretion was observed during the 20–60 min period after yoghurt ingestion and the 20–40 min period after milk ingestion. The endogenous N flows over a 4 h period did not differ between the groups (44·3 (SEM 6·5) mmol for milk and 63·5 (SEM 5·9) mmol for yoghurt). The flow rates of exogenous N indicated a delayed gastric emptying of the yoghurt N compared with N from milk. The jejunal non-protein N (NPN) flow rate increased significantly after milk and yoghurt ingestion due to an increase in the exogenous NPN flow rate. The NPN fraction of exogenous N ranged between 40 and 80%. The net gastro-jejunal absorption of exogenous N did not differ significantly between milk (56·7 (SEM 8·5)%) and yoghurt (50·9 (SEM 7)%). The high level of exogenous N hydrolysis is in accordance with the good digestibility of milk products. Fermentation modifies only the gastric emptying rate of N and does not affect the level of diet hydrolysis, the endogenous N stimulation or the digestibility rate.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Gaudichon, C., Mahé, S., Roos, N., Benamouzig, R., Luengo, C., Huneau, J.-F., … Tome, D. (1995). Exogenous and endogenous nitrogen flow rates and level of protein hydrolysis in the human jejunum after [ 15 N]milk and [ 15 N]yoghurt ingestion. British Journal of Nutrition, 74(2), 251–260. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19950128

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free