Publications by authors named "Takahito Kyoya"

We have reported that a change from a lysine-deficient diet to a lysine-sufficient diet induced compensatory growth in rats and pigs. The aim of the present study was to determine whether compensatory growth of C2C12 myotubes occurs only by sufficiency of lysine or also by the synergic effect of sufficiency of lysine and modulation of the levels of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and glucocorticoid in a medium. The results provide the first evidence of compensatory growth of C2C12 myotubes induced by sufficiency of a single amino acid in combination with modulation of the levels of IGF-I and glucocorticoid.

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Two experiments were conducted to elucidate the nitrogen (N) balance of pigs exhibiting compensatory growth when changing the dietary lysine levels from deficiency to sufficiency. Experiment 1 elucidated whether pigs exhibited compensatory growth with dietary lysine sufficiency. Twenty 6-week-old males were assigned to one of two treatments: control and LC (lysine and control).

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Intramuscular fat content is increased by feeding of low lysine diets in pigs. Reduction in dietary lysine intake results in low plasma lysine concentration and low cytosolic lysine concentration in skeletal muscles. From these observations, we hypothesized that low plasma lysine concentration in pigs fed on low lysine diets reduced supply of lysine from blood circulation to preadipocytes, and this limited supply of lysine might promote adipocyte differentiation in porcine muscles.

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Livestock and laboratory animals show compensatory growth when they are fed ad libitum following a period of restriction feeding. Lysine is a major limiting essential amino acid in the diets both for humans and animals. We hypothesized that changing dietary lysine levels from deficient to sufficient induced compensatory growth in young rats.

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