The effects of the addition of individual amino acids on methionine-induced hypercholesterolemia (experiment 1), and the interacting effects of dietary protein level and sulfur-containing amino acids and glycine on plasma cholesterol concentration (experiment 2) were studied in growing rats fed on a high cholesterol diet. In experiment 1, rats were fed on a 25% casein-0.75% methionine (25CM) diet containing 2.5% of individual amino acids for 2 weeks. Methionine-induced hypercholesterolemia was prevented by the concurrent addition of glycine or serine, but the other amino acids tested (alanine, threonine, leucine, phenylalanine, lysine, arginine, and glutamic acid) had no effect. Histidine rather enhanced the hypercholesterolemia. In experiment 2, rats were fed on a 10%, 25%, or 50% casein diet containing 0.75% methionine, 0.60% cystine, 0.63% taurine, 2.5% glycine, or 0.75% methionine +2.5% glycine for 3 weeks. Dietary addition of 0.75% methionine increased the plasma cholesterol concentration for the 25% and 50% casein diets, but it decreased the plasma cholesterol for the 10% casein diet. When the addition level of methionine was doubled in the 10% casein diet, the plasma cholesterol concentration was significantly higher for the 1.5% methionine-added diet than for the 0.75% methionine-added diet. Cystine and taurine lowered plasma cholesterol for all dietary casein levels. Methionine-induced hypercholesterolemia with 25% and 50% casein diets was prevented by the glycine supplementation. These data suggest that sulfur-containing amino acids and glycine are important in plasma cholesterol regulation.
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