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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Department of Applied Nutrition and Food Chemistry, Lund University, Sweden (MN, MS, and IMEB); the Clinic of Endocrinology, University Hospital MAS, Malmö, Sweden (AHF); and the Department of Medical Physiology, The Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark (JJH)
Background: Milk products deviate from other carbohydrate-containing foods in that they produce high insulin responses, despite their low GI. The insulinotropic mechanism of milk has not been elucidated.
Objective: The objective was to evaluate the effect of common dietary sources of animal or vegetable proteins on concentrations of postprandial blood glucose, insulin, amino acids, and incretin hormones [glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide 1] in healthy subjects.
Design: Twelve healthy volunteers were served test meals consisting of reconstituted milk, cheese, whey, cod, and wheat gluten with equivalent amounts of lactose. An equicarbohydrate load of white-wheat bread was used as a reference meal.
Results: A correlation was found between postprandial insulin responses and early increments in plasma amino acids; the strongest correlations were seen for leucine, valine, lysine, and isoleucine. A correlation was also obtained between responses of insulin and GIP concentrations. Reconstituted milk powder and whey had substantially lower postprandial glucose areas under the curve (AUCs) than did the bread reference (62% and 57%, respectively). Whey meal was accompanied by higher AUCs for insulin (90%) and GIP (54%).
Conclusions: It can be concluded that food proteins differ in their capacity to stimulate insulin release, possibly by differently affecting the early release of incretin hormones and insulinotropic amino acids. Milk proteins have insulinotropic properties; the whey fraction contains the predominating insulin secretagogue.
Key Words: Glycemic index insulin index milk whey food proteins insulinotropic amino acids amino acids incretin hormones
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