Cargando…

Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults

Protein supplementation is a commonly employed strategy to enhance resistance training adaptations. However, little research to date has examined if peanut protein supplementation is effective in this regard. Thus, we sought to determine if peanut protein supplementation (PP; 75 total g/d of powder...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sexton, Casey L., Smith, Morgan A., Smith, Kristen S., Osburn, Shelby C., Godwin, Joshua S., Ruple, Bradley A., Hendricks, Alex M., Mobley, Christopher B., Goodlett, Michael D., Frugé, Andrew D., Young, Kaelin C., Roberts, Michael D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8621247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34836236
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13113981
_version_ 1784605411892002816
author Sexton, Casey L.
Smith, Morgan A.
Smith, Kristen S.
Osburn, Shelby C.
Godwin, Joshua S.
Ruple, Bradley A.
Hendricks, Alex M.
Mobley, Christopher B.
Goodlett, Michael D.
Frugé, Andrew D.
Young, Kaelin C.
Roberts, Michael D.
author_facet Sexton, Casey L.
Smith, Morgan A.
Smith, Kristen S.
Osburn, Shelby C.
Godwin, Joshua S.
Ruple, Bradley A.
Hendricks, Alex M.
Mobley, Christopher B.
Goodlett, Michael D.
Frugé, Andrew D.
Young, Kaelin C.
Roberts, Michael D.
author_sort Sexton, Casey L.
collection PubMed
description Protein supplementation is a commonly employed strategy to enhance resistance training adaptations. However, little research to date has examined if peanut protein supplementation is effective in this regard. Thus, we sought to determine if peanut protein supplementation (PP; 75 total g/d of powder providing 30 g/d protein, >9.2 g/d essential amino acids, ~315 kcal/d) affected resistance training adaptations in college-aged adults. Forty-seven college-aged adults (n = 34 females, n = 13 males) with minimal prior training experience were randomly assigned to a PP group (n = 18 females, n = 5 males) or a non-supplement group (CTL; n = 16 females, n = 8 males) (ClinicalTrials.gov trial registration NCT04707963; registered 13 January 2021). Body composition and strength variables were obtained prior to the intervention (PRE). Participants then completed 10 weeks of full-body resistance training (twice weekly) and PP participants consumed their supplement daily. POST measures were obtained 72 h following the last training bout and were identical to PRE testing measures. Muscle biopsies were also obtained at PRE, 24 h following the first exercise bout, and at POST. The first two biopsy time points were used to determine myofibrillar protein synthesis (MyoPS) rates in response to a naïve training bout with or without PP, and the PRE and POST biopsies were used to determine muscle fiber adaptations in females only. Dependent variables were analyzed in males and females separately using two-way (supplement × time) repeated measures ANOVAs, unless otherwise stated. The 24-h integrated MyoPS response to the first naïve training bout was similar between PP and CTL participants (dependent samples t-test p = 0.759 for females, p = 0.912 for males). For males, the only significant supplement × time interactions were for DXA-derived fat mass (interaction p = 0.034) and knee extensor peak torque (interaction p = 0.010); these variables significantly increased in the CTL group (p < 0.05), but not the PP group. For females, no significant supplement × time interactions existed, although interactions for whole body lean tissue mass (p = 0.088) and vastus lateralis thickness (p = 0.099) approached significance and magnitude increases in these characteristics favored the PP versus CTL group. In summary, this is the second study to determine the effects of PP supplementation on resistance training adaptations. While PP supplementation did not significantly enhance training adaptations, the aforementioned trends in females, the limited n-size in males, and this being the second PP supplementation study warrant more research to determine if different PP dosing strategies are more effective than the current approach.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8621247
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-86212472021-11-27 Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults Sexton, Casey L. Smith, Morgan A. Smith, Kristen S. Osburn, Shelby C. Godwin, Joshua S. Ruple, Bradley A. Hendricks, Alex M. Mobley, Christopher B. Goodlett, Michael D. Frugé, Andrew D. Young, Kaelin C. Roberts, Michael D. Nutrients Article Protein supplementation is a commonly employed strategy to enhance resistance training adaptations. However, little research to date has examined if peanut protein supplementation is effective in this regard. Thus, we sought to determine if peanut protein supplementation (PP; 75 total g/d of powder providing 30 g/d protein, >9.2 g/d essential amino acids, ~315 kcal/d) affected resistance training adaptations in college-aged adults. Forty-seven college-aged adults (n = 34 females, n = 13 males) with minimal prior training experience were randomly assigned to a PP group (n = 18 females, n = 5 males) or a non-supplement group (CTL; n = 16 females, n = 8 males) (ClinicalTrials.gov trial registration NCT04707963; registered 13 January 2021). Body composition and strength variables were obtained prior to the intervention (PRE). Participants then completed 10 weeks of full-body resistance training (twice weekly) and PP participants consumed their supplement daily. POST measures were obtained 72 h following the last training bout and were identical to PRE testing measures. Muscle biopsies were also obtained at PRE, 24 h following the first exercise bout, and at POST. The first two biopsy time points were used to determine myofibrillar protein synthesis (MyoPS) rates in response to a naïve training bout with or without PP, and the PRE and POST biopsies were used to determine muscle fiber adaptations in females only. Dependent variables were analyzed in males and females separately using two-way (supplement × time) repeated measures ANOVAs, unless otherwise stated. The 24-h integrated MyoPS response to the first naïve training bout was similar between PP and CTL participants (dependent samples t-test p = 0.759 for females, p = 0.912 for males). For males, the only significant supplement × time interactions were for DXA-derived fat mass (interaction p = 0.034) and knee extensor peak torque (interaction p = 0.010); these variables significantly increased in the CTL group (p < 0.05), but not the PP group. For females, no significant supplement × time interactions existed, although interactions for whole body lean tissue mass (p = 0.088) and vastus lateralis thickness (p = 0.099) approached significance and magnitude increases in these characteristics favored the PP versus CTL group. In summary, this is the second study to determine the effects of PP supplementation on resistance training adaptations. While PP supplementation did not significantly enhance training adaptations, the aforementioned trends in females, the limited n-size in males, and this being the second PP supplementation study warrant more research to determine if different PP dosing strategies are more effective than the current approach. MDPI 2021-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8621247/ /pubmed/34836236 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13113981 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sexton, Casey L.
Smith, Morgan A.
Smith, Kristen S.
Osburn, Shelby C.
Godwin, Joshua S.
Ruple, Bradley A.
Hendricks, Alex M.
Mobley, Christopher B.
Goodlett, Michael D.
Frugé, Andrew D.
Young, Kaelin C.
Roberts, Michael D.
Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults
title Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults
title_full Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults
title_fullStr Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults
title_short Effects of Peanut Protein Supplementation on Resistance Training Adaptations in Younger Adults
title_sort effects of peanut protein supplementation on resistance training adaptations in younger adults
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8621247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34836236
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13113981
work_keys_str_mv AT sextoncaseyl effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT smithmorgana effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT smithkristens effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT osburnshelbyc effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT godwinjoshuas effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT ruplebradleya effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT hendricksalexm effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT mobleychristopherb effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT goodlettmichaeld effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT frugeandrewd effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT youngkaelinc effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults
AT robertsmichaeld effectsofpeanutproteinsupplementationonresistancetrainingadaptationsinyoungeradults