Pages that link to "Q57134360"
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The following pages link to Flooding with L-[1-13C]leucine stimulates human muscle protein incorporation of continuously infused L-[1-13C]valine (Q57134360):
Displaying 46 items.
- Amino acids and muscle loss with aging (Q24635340) (← links)
- Human muscle protein turnover—why is it so variable? (Q27693892) (← links)
- Effects of contraction and insulin on protein synthesis, AMP-activated protein kinase and phosphorylation state of translation factors in rat skeletal muscle (Q28109460) (← links)
- Skeletal muscle homeostasis and plasticity in youth and ageing: impact of nutrition and exercise (Q28262423) (← links)
- Effects of leucine and its metabolite β-hydroxy-β-methylbutyrate on human skeletal muscle protein metabolism (Q28288299) (← links)
- Muscle tissue changes with aging (Q33584374) (← links)
- Effect of insulin on human skeletal muscle protein synthesis is modulated by insulin-induced changes in muscle blood flow and amino acid availability (Q33584423) (← links)
- An increase in essential amino acid availability upregulates amino acid transporter expression in human skeletal muscle (Q33840291) (← links)
- Excess leucine intake enhances muscle anabolic signaling but not net protein anabolism in young men and women (Q34204391) (← links)
- Keeping older muscle “young” through dietary protein and physical activity (Q34300261) (← links)
- Dose-dependent increases in p70S6K phosphorylation and intramuscular branched-chain amino acids in older men following resistance exercise and protein intake. (Q34582362) (← links)
- Unilateral hindlimb casting induced a delayed generalized muscle atrophy during rehabilitation that is prevented by a whey or a high protein diet but not a free leucine-enriched diet (Q34981247) (← links)
- Increased plasma gln and Leu Ra and inappropriately low muscle protein synthesis rate in AIDS wasting (Q35224550) (← links)
- Nutrition and sarcopenia of ageing. (Q35246402) (← links)
- Essential amino acids are primarily responsible for the amino acid stimulation of muscle protein anabolism in healthy elderly adults (Q35335196) (← links)
- Role of protein and amino acids in the pathophysiology and treatment of sarcopenia (Q35335210) (← links)
- Exercise, amino acids, and aging in the control of human muscle protein synthesis. (Q35787793) (← links)
- Essential amino acid sensing, signaling, and transport in the regulation of human muscle protein metabolism. (Q35792390) (← links)
- A new method to measure muscle protein synthesis in humans by endogenously introduced d9-leucine and using blood for precursor enrichment determination (Q36036417) (← links)
- Role of Ingested Amino Acids and Protein in the Promotion of Resistance Exercise-Induced Muscle Protein Anabolism. (Q36498001) (← links)
- Alternative equations for whole-body protein synthesis and for fractional synthetic rates of proteins (Q36731834) (← links)
- Calorie restriction does not increase short-term or long-term protein synthesis (Q36957288) (← links)
- Human Skeletal Muscle Protein Metabolism Responses to Amino Acid Nutrition (Q37089808) (← links)
- Leucine-enriched nutrients and the regulation of mammalian target of rapamycin signalling and human skeletal muscle protein synthesis (Q37135107) (← links)
- Skeletal Muscle Protein Balance and Metabolism in the Elderly (Q37395559) (← links)
- A metabolic link to skeletal muscle wasting and regeneration (Q37541118) (← links)
- Muscle protein synthesis in response to nutrition and exercise (Q37979988) (← links)
- Amino acid flooding doses for measuring rates of protein synthesis (Q38159964) (← links)
- Historical and contemporary stable isotope tracer approaches to studying mammalian protein metabolism (Q38835222) (← links)
- A dose- rather than delivery profile-dependent mechanism regulates the "muscle-full" effect in response to oral essential amino acid intake in young men (Q41491237) (← links)
- Human muscle protein synthesis is modulated by extracellular, not intramuscular amino acid availability: a dose-response study (Q42445886) (← links)
- Disassociation between the effects of amino acids and insulin on signaling, ubiquitin ligases, and protein turnover in human muscle (Q42532366) (← links)
- Differential effects of insulin and dietary amino acids on muscle protein synthesis in adult and old rats (Q45129868) (← links)
- Critical Assessment of Methods Used to Measure Protein Synthesis In Human Subjects (Q45782062) (← links)
- A role for leucine in rejuvenating the anabolic effects of food in old rats (Q46739938) (← links)
- Soluble Milk Proteins Improve Muscle Mass Recovery after Immobilization-Induced Muscle Atrophy in Old Rats but Do not Improve Muscle Functional Property Restoration. (Q47348486) (← links)
- Impact of the calcium form of β-hydroxy-β-methylbutyrate upon human skeletal muscle protein metabolism. (Q47448498) (← links)
- Effects of leucine-enriched essential amino acid and whey protein bolus dosing upon skeletal muscle protein synthesis at rest and after exercise in older women (Q47653598) (← links)
- Human skeletal muscle is refractory to the anabolic effects of leucine during the postprandial muscle-full period in older men. (Q47690599) (← links)
- The single-biopsy approach in determining protein synthesis in human slow-turning-over tissue: use of flood-primed, continuous infusion of amino acid tracers (Q51092194) (← links)
- Activation of mTORC1 by leucine is potentiated by branched-chain amino acids and even more so by essential amino acids following resistance exercise. (Q53790846) (← links)
- The age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and function: Measurement and physiology of muscle fibre atrophy and muscle fibre loss in humans (Q58702236) (← links)
- Supplementation of a suboptimal protein dose with leucine or essential amino acids: effects on myofibrillar protein synthesis at rest and following resistance exercise in men (Q63805283) (← links)
- Isolated branched-chain amino acid intake and muscle protein synthesis in humans: a biochemical review (Q90055017) (← links)
- The effect of oral essential amino acids on incretin hormone production in youth and ageing (Q90583668) (← links)
- The muscle anabolic effect of protein ingestion during a hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp in middle-aged women is not caused by leucine alone (Q90583874) (← links)