Omega-3s Help Protein Synthesis
Egger29
Posts: 14,741 Member
Good Afternoon Friends! I've seen numerous articles and studies on this recently, but this is one of the best which sums it all up nicely with some definitive benefits I'm sure we'd all love!
Omega-3s Help Protein Synthesis by Helen Kollias, July 22nd, 2011.
Summary: Omega-3 fatty acids are important for overall health — including helping us build bigger muscles by improving protein synthesis.
My nearly two-year-old daughter is asking for her “deeacheh.” Again. She’s licked the spoon clean from her daily dose of berry-flavoured DHA (a type of omega-3 fatty acid). Mommy. De-ach-eh.
Giving her omega-3 fatty acids to help her brain development seemed like a good idea until she started outsmarting me. Last night she figured out that screaming directly into her baby monitor makes mommy run in really fast to see what’s going on.
I open the door to see her looking over at me with a very satisfied look on her face. She’s standing over the monitor that is on a nightstand, behind a Kleenex box and across the room from where I last left her. Success! I’m just waiting for a “10-4 mommy” over the monitor just before some kind of Great Escape.
Why fat is important - In the decade of big hair and bigger shoulder pads the 80s were also big on low-fat or even better no-fat. Fat was bad and hair spray was essential. Now we know better: Some fats are essential, and hair spray has its problems.
Fat actually does things in your body. Important things that let you live. Some major functions of fat include:
- Providing energy
- Carrying fat soluble nutrients like vitamin E
- Helping with hormone synthesis and signalling
- Making up your cells’ membranes
- Making up your brain and much of your nervous sytem
Fat types - There are three major types of fat that occur in nature:
1) Saturated
2) Monounsaturated
3) Polyunsaturated
A fourth type of fat, trans fat, appears naturally in small amounts. Any industrially created versions should be avoided. All naturally occurring fats are important.
Dietary fats and oils are made up of fatty acid molecules. Three fatty acids plus a glycerol molecule makes a fat molecule (aka triglyceride). Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) include omega-3 fatty acids, omega-6 fatty acids and omega-9 fatty acids.
Out of polyunsaturated fats comes a further subgroup: essential fatty acids.
Essential fatty acids are two specific types of omega-3 and -6 fatty acids: alpha-linoleic acid (ALA) and linoleic acid, respectively. They are essential because your body needs them, and can’t make them from other fats.
Omega-3s - Omega-3 fatty acids seem to be the most important of the fatty acids, but this is probably because most of us don’t eat enough omega-3 fatty acids in our daily diets. Omega-3 fatty acids do many good things in our bodies, including:
1) Reducing inflammation
2) Reducing cardiovascular disease
3) Improving insulin sensitivity (great news for type II diabetics)
4) Improving cognitive (brain) development
EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) seem to be the most biologically important omega-3 fatty acids. ALA can be converted into EPA, and EPA can then be converted into DHA, but it seems your body can’t make a lot of DHA.
Fish oil - Where does fish oil fit in? As the name suggests, it’s oil from fish, in the same way that olive oil is oil from olives. Generally, fish oil you get from the store comes from oily fish like anchovies, mackerel or sardines. Fish oil is special — it’s a good source of EPA and DHA.
Omega-3s and protein synthesis - Protein synthesis is the process of (re)building new proteins from amino acid “building blocks”. Protein synthesis is an important part of building lean mass — for instance, in bone and muscle tissue.
This week I’m reviewing two studies done by the same researchers looking at omega-3 fatty acids. Can o-3 supplementation help us build bigger muscles by affecting protein synthesis?
Smith GI, Atherton P, Reeds DN, Mohammed BS, Rankin D, Rennie MJ, Mittendorfer B. Dietary omega-3 fatty acid supplementation increases the rate of muscle protein synthesis in older adults: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011 Feb;93(2):402-12. Epub 2010 Dec 15.
Smith GI, Atherton P, Reeds DN, Mohammed BS, Rankin D, Rennie MJ, Mittendorfer B. Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids augment the muscle protein anabolic response to hyperinsulinaemia-hyperaminoacidaemia in healthy young and middle-aged men and women. Clin Sci (Lond). 2011 Sep 1;121(6):267-78.
Methods
In these two studies, researchers studied the effects of omega-3 supplementation on protein synthesis in people ranging from 40s to 70s.
Measuring protein synthesis: How the heck do you measure muscle protein synthesis?
By intravenously giving a specific amino acid (phenylalanine) with one slightly heavier hydrogen that lets you track the amino acid you’ve added. Think of it as a little flag on your amino acid. By tracking how quickly the flagged phenylalanine (and its byproducts) move throughout the body, you can estimate the rate of protein synthesis.
Insulin and other unlabelled amino acids were also infused to make sure that insulin and amino acids weren’t limiting protein synthesis.
Omega-3 supplementation
Total omega-3 supplementation was 4 g of Lovaza/day, which contains 1.86 g EPA and 1.50g of DHA for 8 weeks. By the way, Lovaza is produced by a pharmaceutical company, and requires a prescription.
The two studies are pretty much the same with two important differences:
age of the volunteers; and
using corn oil (an omega-6) as a placebo.
In the first study, the average age of the volunteers was 71, and half the volunteers got corn oil (omega-6) supplements instead of omega-3s. In the second study, subjects were on average 40 years old, and got no placebo.
Results
In the first study using older volunteers, omega-3 supplementation increased protein synthesis rates more than corn oil (when given insulin and amino acids).
Great, but does this only happen in older adults who have more inflammation and are anabolic resistant (in other words, who don’t respond as strongly to anabolic stimuli like more dietary protein)? And could the results really mean that corn oil depresses protein synthesis (instead of meaning that omega-3s improve it)?
In the second study with younger volunteers (40 years old) and no placebo, the results were the same – increased protein synthesis.
Conclusion - Omega 3 fatty acids, at 4 g/day, improved muscle protein synthesis in older and younger volunteers after 8 weeks of supplementation while insulin and amino acids were given intravenously.
After the original study was done, everybody concluded that somehow the affect of omega-3 fatty acids on protein synthesis in older adults had to be indirect.
Older adults tend to have more inflammation and are less sensitive to amino acids so it made sense that omega-3 fatty acids would reduce inflammation and increase sensitivity to amino acids, and that would increase protein synthesis. But the second study challenged that idea.
Since younger adults shouldn’t have that much inflammation, and they shouldn’t be resistant to amino acids, then supplementing with omega-3 fatty acids shouldn’t increase protein synthesis, based on the conclusions from the first study, but it does.
A more practical question is: Does increased protein synthesis in these studies mean more slabs of muscle?
Hard to say, since there was no exercise in these studies, so this is without any exercise effect. And without infusion of insulin and amino acids there was no effect of omega-3s.
It’s going to take few more years to figure out whether omega-3 fatty acids really can help you gain muscle, but with so many other known benefits, omega-3s are worth taking anyway.
Bottom line - Take omega-3 fatty acids. They decrease inflammation, prevent cardiovascular disease, improve brain function and immune health, and now they might even help you gain muscle by increasing muscle protein synthesis.
Omega-3s Help Protein Synthesis by Helen Kollias, July 22nd, 2011.
Summary: Omega-3 fatty acids are important for overall health — including helping us build bigger muscles by improving protein synthesis.
My nearly two-year-old daughter is asking for her “deeacheh.” Again. She’s licked the spoon clean from her daily dose of berry-flavoured DHA (a type of omega-3 fatty acid). Mommy. De-ach-eh.
Giving her omega-3 fatty acids to help her brain development seemed like a good idea until she started outsmarting me. Last night she figured out that screaming directly into her baby monitor makes mommy run in really fast to see what’s going on.
I open the door to see her looking over at me with a very satisfied look on her face. She’s standing over the monitor that is on a nightstand, behind a Kleenex box and across the room from where I last left her. Success! I’m just waiting for a “10-4 mommy” over the monitor just before some kind of Great Escape.
Why fat is important - In the decade of big hair and bigger shoulder pads the 80s were also big on low-fat or even better no-fat. Fat was bad and hair spray was essential. Now we know better: Some fats are essential, and hair spray has its problems.
Fat actually does things in your body. Important things that let you live. Some major functions of fat include:
- Providing energy
- Carrying fat soluble nutrients like vitamin E
- Helping with hormone synthesis and signalling
- Making up your cells’ membranes
- Making up your brain and much of your nervous sytem
Fat types - There are three major types of fat that occur in nature:
1) Saturated
2) Monounsaturated
3) Polyunsaturated
A fourth type of fat, trans fat, appears naturally in small amounts. Any industrially created versions should be avoided. All naturally occurring fats are important.
Dietary fats and oils are made up of fatty acid molecules. Three fatty acids plus a glycerol molecule makes a fat molecule (aka triglyceride). Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) include omega-3 fatty acids, omega-6 fatty acids and omega-9 fatty acids.
Out of polyunsaturated fats comes a further subgroup: essential fatty acids.
Essential fatty acids are two specific types of omega-3 and -6 fatty acids: alpha-linoleic acid (ALA) and linoleic acid, respectively. They are essential because your body needs them, and can’t make them from other fats.
Omega-3s - Omega-3 fatty acids seem to be the most important of the fatty acids, but this is probably because most of us don’t eat enough omega-3 fatty acids in our daily diets. Omega-3 fatty acids do many good things in our bodies, including:
1) Reducing inflammation
2) Reducing cardiovascular disease
3) Improving insulin sensitivity (great news for type II diabetics)
4) Improving cognitive (brain) development
EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) seem to be the most biologically important omega-3 fatty acids. ALA can be converted into EPA, and EPA can then be converted into DHA, but it seems your body can’t make a lot of DHA.
Fish oil - Where does fish oil fit in? As the name suggests, it’s oil from fish, in the same way that olive oil is oil from olives. Generally, fish oil you get from the store comes from oily fish like anchovies, mackerel or sardines. Fish oil is special — it’s a good source of EPA and DHA.
Omega-3s and protein synthesis - Protein synthesis is the process of (re)building new proteins from amino acid “building blocks”. Protein synthesis is an important part of building lean mass — for instance, in bone and muscle tissue.
This week I’m reviewing two studies done by the same researchers looking at omega-3 fatty acids. Can o-3 supplementation help us build bigger muscles by affecting protein synthesis?
Smith GI, Atherton P, Reeds DN, Mohammed BS, Rankin D, Rennie MJ, Mittendorfer B. Dietary omega-3 fatty acid supplementation increases the rate of muscle protein synthesis in older adults: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011 Feb;93(2):402-12. Epub 2010 Dec 15.
Smith GI, Atherton P, Reeds DN, Mohammed BS, Rankin D, Rennie MJ, Mittendorfer B. Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids augment the muscle protein anabolic response to hyperinsulinaemia-hyperaminoacidaemia in healthy young and middle-aged men and women. Clin Sci (Lond). 2011 Sep 1;121(6):267-78.
Methods
In these two studies, researchers studied the effects of omega-3 supplementation on protein synthesis in people ranging from 40s to 70s.
Measuring protein synthesis: How the heck do you measure muscle protein synthesis?
By intravenously giving a specific amino acid (phenylalanine) with one slightly heavier hydrogen that lets you track the amino acid you’ve added. Think of it as a little flag on your amino acid. By tracking how quickly the flagged phenylalanine (and its byproducts) move throughout the body, you can estimate the rate of protein synthesis.
Insulin and other unlabelled amino acids were also infused to make sure that insulin and amino acids weren’t limiting protein synthesis.
Omega-3 supplementation
Total omega-3 supplementation was 4 g of Lovaza/day, which contains 1.86 g EPA and 1.50g of DHA for 8 weeks. By the way, Lovaza is produced by a pharmaceutical company, and requires a prescription.
The two studies are pretty much the same with two important differences:
age of the volunteers; and
using corn oil (an omega-6) as a placebo.
In the first study, the average age of the volunteers was 71, and half the volunteers got corn oil (omega-6) supplements instead of omega-3s. In the second study, subjects were on average 40 years old, and got no placebo.
Results
In the first study using older volunteers, omega-3 supplementation increased protein synthesis rates more than corn oil (when given insulin and amino acids).
Great, but does this only happen in older adults who have more inflammation and are anabolic resistant (in other words, who don’t respond as strongly to anabolic stimuli like more dietary protein)? And could the results really mean that corn oil depresses protein synthesis (instead of meaning that omega-3s improve it)?
In the second study with younger volunteers (40 years old) and no placebo, the results were the same – increased protein synthesis.
Conclusion - Omega 3 fatty acids, at 4 g/day, improved muscle protein synthesis in older and younger volunteers after 8 weeks of supplementation while insulin and amino acids were given intravenously.
After the original study was done, everybody concluded that somehow the affect of omega-3 fatty acids on protein synthesis in older adults had to be indirect.
Older adults tend to have more inflammation and are less sensitive to amino acids so it made sense that omega-3 fatty acids would reduce inflammation and increase sensitivity to amino acids, and that would increase protein synthesis. But the second study challenged that idea.
Since younger adults shouldn’t have that much inflammation, and they shouldn’t be resistant to amino acids, then supplementing with omega-3 fatty acids shouldn’t increase protein synthesis, based on the conclusions from the first study, but it does.
A more practical question is: Does increased protein synthesis in these studies mean more slabs of muscle?
Hard to say, since there was no exercise in these studies, so this is without any exercise effect. And without infusion of insulin and amino acids there was no effect of omega-3s.
It’s going to take few more years to figure out whether omega-3 fatty acids really can help you gain muscle, but with so many other known benefits, omega-3s are worth taking anyway.
Bottom line - Take omega-3 fatty acids. They decrease inflammation, prevent cardiovascular disease, improve brain function and immune health, and now they might even help you gain muscle by increasing muscle protein synthesis.
0
Replies
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Wow - Great article. I've been taking Omega 3's for a while now and actually have both my kids on the berry flavoured ones that she mentions. Same as her daughter they actually ask for them each day. Well, the older one does while the youngest just points and jump up and down in excitement. :-)0
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GREAT ARTICLE:bigsmile: .. and thank you for posting, b/c it answers some questions that I had posted to my friends list a few days ago about Omega-3 but I must add...
~THIS PART WAS HILARIOUS!!!!~
"Giving her omega-3 fatty acids to help her brain development seemed like a good idea until she started outsmarting me. Last night she figured out that screaming directly into her baby monitor makes mommy run in really fast to see what’s going on."0 -
Hey Egger!
Hearing about how great omega 3's are I once (few years ago) went out & bought a bottle of omega 3-6-9's all equal amounts of each in pill form. I figured "ooooh this is cheaper than o3 alone & all omegas must be good".... once I got home I decided to read up on the difference.
I don't remember now too well but I think i remember reading that you must have more omega 3's over 6 & 9s & too much of 6 will actually keep you from absorbing the 3 or will counter-act it... something along those lines. This bottle is now still sitting in the cupboard......
Do you have any idea what I'm talking about? Is it true?0 -
It’s relatively to get omega-6 fatty acids. These are found in plant oils, for instance, and factory-raised animals (which are fed a lot of corn and soy) will usually have a lot of omega-6 too.
It’s generally hard for people in Western countries to get omega-3 fats from dietary sources. We eat a lot more processed foods and a lot less wild game and plants than our ancestors did. And we don’t usually eat things like snails and insects, which are also high in omega-3s, although many folks worldwide still eat these as part of traditional diets. We rely heavily now on omega-6 vegetable oils.
We evolved with a fat intake ratio of about 1:1 omega-3 to omega-6 fatty acids. Now, it’s closer to 1:20.
Because omega-3s and omega-6s compete with each other for space in cell membranes and the attention of enzymes, the ratio matters more than the absolute amount consumed of either fat.
Ref: All About Fish Oil - Ryan Andrews0 -
Good read, good citation.0
This discussion has been closed.
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