Abstract

Lysine is an important indispensable amino acid, and describing the lysine content of a food or feedstuff provides useful information about nutritional value. However, when a food or feedstuff is subjected to heating the lysine present can be altered to nutritionally unavailable derivatives. These derivatives can revert back to lysine during the acid hydrolysis step used in amino acid analysis causing an overestimate of the lysine content. There have been many chemical methods developed to determine the reactive (unmodified) lysine content of foods and feedstuffs, but these do not take into account the incomplete absorption of lysine from the small intestine. There are also a number of animal-based assays for determining available lysine (the lysine that can be absorbed in a form that can be used for protein synthesis). The true ileal amino acid digestibility assay is commonly used to determine amino acid availability and is accurate for application to unprocessed foods and feedstuffs but is not accurate for lysine and possibly other amino acids when applied to heat-processed foods or feedstuffs. For such protein sources, assays such as the slope-ratio assay, indicator amino acid oxidation assay and the BIOLYSINEtrade mark assay (true ileal digestible reactive lysine assay) have been developed to determine available lysine. The present paper discusses the efficacy of the BIOLYSINEtrade mark assay as well as other assays for determining available lysine in processed foods and feedstuffs.

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