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    True Ileal Amino Acid Digestibility of Human Foods Classified According to Food Type as Determined in the Growing Pig
    (Elsevier Inc on behalf of the American Society for Nutrition, 2025-10-18) Hodgkinson SM; Stroebinger N; Stein HH; Fanelli NS; de Vries S; van der Wielen N; Hendriks WH; Moughan PJ
    Background: A Food and Agriculture Organization Expert Consultation recommended the use of digestible indispensable amino acid score (DIAAS) to evaluate protein quality of foods for humans. Calculation of DIAAS requires true ileal digestibility (TID) of amino acid (AA) values but currently insufficient data are available. Objectives: This study aims to generate in pigs TID of AA for a wide range of foods commonly consumed by humans and determine the range of differences in TID of AA among food types. Methods: A standardized protocol was followed to determine TID of AA in 97 foods across 3 laboratories. Female pigs (25–100 kg during study, n ≥ 6) received foods for 7 d following a Youden Square design with ileal digesta collected via T-cannula on days 6–7. Endogenous AA losses were determined by feeding a protein-free diet. Foods, diets, and digesta were analyzed for nitrogen, AA, reactive lysine, titanium and dry matter. Foods were categorized into food types with the degree of variation within each food type evaluated using descriptive statistics. Results: The TID (mean of AA) ranged from 0.247 (apples) to 0.988 (beef tenderloin). The median TID of AA was high (mean of AA > 0.90) for foods categorized as dairy products, eggs, fish and seafood, isolates and concentrates, meat, nuts, plant-based burgers, soy products and wheat products. Food categories with median TID < 0.80 were baked products, fruit, pulses and seeds, and wheat bran cereal, yeast, and zein. Food categories with low variations between foods were fish and seafood (1% units), dairy products (3% units), and eggs (5% units), whereas categories with the greatest variation were grains (18% units), vegetables (16% units), seeds (14% units), and fruit (12% units). There was considerable variation in TID for individual AA both within and among foods. Conclusions: The database with TID of AA of 97 foods generated by 3 laboratories using a standardized methodology can be utilized for protein quality evaluation.
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    Editorial: Dietary protein for human health.
    (Frontiers Media S.A., 2025-01-15) Moughan PJ; Hendriks WH; Hodgkinson SM; Chungchunlam SMS; Lim WXJ; Mensink M; Stroebinger N; van der Wielen N; Pivovarova-Ramich O
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    Comparison of True Ileal Amino Acid Digestibility between Adult Humans and Growing Pigs
    (Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society for Nutrition, 2022-07) Hodgkinson SM; Stroebinger N; van der Wielen N; Mensink M; Montoya C; Hendriks WH; de Vries S; Stein HH; Moughan PJ
    BACKGROUND: It is not feasible to determine the true ileal amino acid (AA) digestibility of protein sources in humans on a routine basis, and the growing pig has been recommended as an animal model for this purpose but requires further validation. OBJECTIVES: To determine and compare true ileal AA digestibility between adult human ileostomates and growing cannulated pigs for a range of food proteins. METHODS: Seven protein sources (black beans, bread, collagen, pigeon peas, wheat bran, whey protein isolate, and zein) that spanned the range of digestibilities typically seen in foods were evaluated. Six female growing pigs received each of the protein sources, as well as a protein-free diet, and digesta were collected via ileal T-cannula. Adult human ileostomates consumed the same protein sources (5-8 ileostomates, depending on the protein source), as well as a protein-free diet, and digesta were collected. Titanium dioxide and celite were included in the diets as indigestible markers. True ileal AA digestibility coefficients were determined. RESULTS: There was a significant effect of protein source (P ≤ 0.001) for all AAs. The effect of species was not significant (P > 0.05) except for total lysine (but not for available lysine). When analyzed within diets, the statistically significant species effect for true lysine digestibility was found for black beans only. Pig and human digestibility values were generally highly and significantly (P ≤ 0.05) correlated. A linear regression equation derived for true ileal AA digestibility (given as coefficients) determined in the human and pig for the overall mean of all AAs was (y = human, x = pig) y = 1.00x - 0.010, with the slope not statistically significant (P > 0.05) from unity and the intercept not different (P > 0.05) from zero. CONCLUSIONS: True ileal AA digestibility values determined in the growing pig can be directly used for predicting digestibility in adult humans.