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. 1994 May;124(5):664-73.
doi: 10.1093/jn/124.5.664.

Nutrient utilization and protein turnover in the hindlimb of cattle treated with bovine somatotropin

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Nutrient utilization and protein turnover in the hindlimb of cattle treated with bovine somatotropin

Y R Boisclair et al. J Nutr. 1994 May.

Abstract

Our objectives were to assess the effects of chronic administration of recombinant bovine somatotropin (bST) on nutrient utilization and protein turnover in the hindlimb of growing Holstein steers. External iliac vessels were catheterized to allow for hindlimb measurements of arteriovenous differences and blood flow. Animals were used in a single-reversal design with 16-d treatment periods of daily intramuscular injection of either excipient or 120 micrograms/kg body wt of bST. On d 11 and 13 of each period, a primed-continuous infusion of L-[sidechain-2,3-3H]tyrosine was initiated, followed by a 4-h sampling period to assess hindlimb nutrient utilization and protein kinetics. Somatotropin did not alter blood flow or the consumption of acetate and oxygen across the hindlimb. In contrast, glucose uptake was reduced by 22% despite increases in arterial concentrations of glucose and insulin of 10 and 114%, respectively. Treatment with bST increased hindlimb protein accretion (estimated from net uptake of tyrosine) and whole-body N balance, each by approximately 40%. A modest increase (10%) in the absolute rate of protein synthesis seemed to account for the improved N retention in the hindlimb with no change in the rate of protein degradation. Thus, bST reduced the responses of the hindlimb to insulin, and a small alteration in protein synthesis was sufficient to explain substantial improvement in protein deposition.

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