Dietary total, animal, and plant protein-energy ratio and risk of mortality: results from the NHANES III and a lifelong animal experiment.

IF 5.4 1区 农林科学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Food & Function Pub Date : 2025-07-23 DOI:10.1039/d4fo05785f
Zican Li, Lianjie Huang, Qiushuang Zhu, Fanyun Wang, Defang Li, Bo Qu, Runan Zhang, Yue Guan, Akinkunmi Paul Okekunl, Jiaying Yu, Yuqing Wu, Xuanfeng Tang, Xiaoqing Li, Xinyi Lv, Xiang Shu, Xiangju Kong, Rennan Feng
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Protein is essential for basic physiological functions of the body, but the relationship between excessive protein intake and health is controversial. The association between dietary protein and mortality may depend on protein intake and source. This study examined the links between the total/animal/plant protein-energy ratios and mortality from all causes, cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer. Methods: The population study included 13 490 participants with a median follow-up of 26.5 years from NHANES III. The study examined the relationship between total, animal, and plant protein-energy ratios, and their combinations, with mortality through Cox proportional hazards models, restricted cubic splines (RCS), and isocaloric (2.5%, 5%, and 10%) substitution analysis. In an animal experiment, 60 male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to normal protein diets (NC = 30) or isocaloric high-protein (HP) diets (HP = 30) for 101 weeks. Subsequently, renal histologic staining was performed using hematoxylin and eosin, and serum amino acid levels were measured through targeted metabolomics. Changes in hepatic gene expression profiles were assessed via principal component analysis (PCA), analyzed using protein interaction networks and modules with the STRING online database, and validated through quantitative real-time PCR (q-PCR). Results: Total protein-energy ratio was positively associated with all-cause mortality (p-trend = 0.003), and animal-protein-energy ratio was also positively associated with mortality (all-cause: p-trend = 0.007, cancer: p-trend = 0.020). RCS showed increased risks of all-cause and cancer mortality when total protein-energy ratio exceeded 14.8%. The risk of all-cause and cancer mortality showed a downward trend when isocaloric plant-protein-energy ratios replaced animal-protein-energy ratios. Rats fed high-animal-protein diets showed higher risk for tumorigenesis. HP diet may alter the transcriptome profiles of rat liver, with upregulated ACSM5, AMACR and TM7SF2, and downregulated HAO2. Conclusions: Keeping the total protein-energy ratio below 14.8% may be beneficial to reducing all-cause and cancer mortality. Substitution of animal protein with plant protein (by 2.5%, 5%, and 10% of energy) was associated with a decreasing trend in all-cause and cancer mortality. Animal experiments confirmed that the risk of tumorigenesis was associated with a high animal-protein-energy ratio, highlighting the effects of different sources of protein on health and the mechanisms of cancer development.

膳食总、动物和植物蛋白质能量比与死亡风险:来自NHANES III和终身动物实验的结果。
背景:蛋白质是人体基本生理功能所必需的,但过量摄入蛋白质与健康之间的关系存在争议。膳食蛋白质与死亡率之间的关系可能取决于蛋白质的摄入量和来源。这项研究调查了总/动物/植物蛋白质能量比与各种原因的死亡率、心血管疾病(CVD)和癌症之间的联系。方法:人群研究包括13490名参与者,从NHANES III开始的中位随访时间为26.5年。该研究通过Cox比例风险模型、限制性三次样条(RCS)和等热量(2.5%、5%和10%)替代分析,研究了总、动物和植物蛋白质能量比及其组合与死亡率之间的关系。动物实验选用60只雄性Wistar大鼠,随机分为正常蛋白质饮食(NC = 30)和等热量高蛋白饮食(HP = 30),持续101周。随后,使用苏木精和伊红进行肾脏组织学染色,并通过靶向代谢组学测量血清氨基酸水平。通过主成分分析(PCA)评估肝脏基因表达谱的变化,使用STRING在线数据库的蛋白质相互作用网络和模块进行分析,并通过定量实时PCR (q-PCR)进行验证。结果:总蛋白能量比与全因死亡率呈正相关(p-trend = 0.003),动物蛋白能量比与全因死亡率呈正相关(p-trend = 0.007,癌症:p-trend = 0.020)。RCS显示,当总蛋白质能量比超过14.8%时,全因死亡率和癌症死亡率增加。当等热量植物蛋白能量比取代动物蛋白能量比时,全因死亡率和癌症死亡率呈下降趋势。饲喂高动物性蛋白饲料的大鼠患肿瘤的风险更高。HP饮食可能改变大鼠肝脏转录组谱,ACSM5、AMACR和TM7SF2上调,HAO2下调。结论:将总蛋白能量比控制在14.8%以下可能有利于降低全因死亡率和癌症死亡率。用植物蛋白替代动物蛋白(2.5%、5%和10%的能量)与全因死亡率和癌症死亡率的下降趋势相关。动物实验证实,肿瘤发生的风险与较高的动物蛋白质-能量比有关,突出了不同来源的蛋白质对健康的影响和癌症发展的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Food & Function
Food & Function BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY-FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
6.60%
发文量
957
审稿时长
1.8 months
期刊介绍: Food & Function provides a unique venue for physicists, chemists, biochemists, nutritionists and other food scientists to publish work at the interface of the chemistry, physics and biology of food. The journal focuses on food and the functions of food in relation to health.
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