Stress-prone? Altering the diet may help.Some people undertake seemingly impossible tasks without frustration, while others become anxious or depressed. A new Dutch study finds that the latter individuals might cope with pressure better if they tailored their diet to fuel the brain with more tryptophan tryptophan (trĭp`təfăn), organic compound, one of the 20 amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the l-stereoisomer appears in mammalian protein. . The brain uses this essential amino acid essential amino acid n. An alpha-amino acid that is required for protein synthesis but cannot be synthesized by humans and must be obtained in the diet. , a building block of many proteins, to fashion serotonin, a mood-enhancing neurotransmitter. Neuropsychologist Neuropsychologist A clinical psychologist who specializes in assessing psychological status caused by a brain disorder. Mentioned in: Post-Concussion Syndrome C. Rob Markus of the TNO TNO Tamarindo, Costa Rica (Airport code) TNO Nederlandse Organisatie voor Toegepast Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek TNO Trans-Neptunian Object TNO The New Order (paramilitary street gang) TNO Trust No One Nutrition and Food Research Institute in Zeist, the Netherlands, and his colleagues identified a milk-derived protein--alpha-lactalbumin--that is unusually rich in tryptophan. Moreover, this protein is low in amino acids that compete with tryptophan for absorption by the brain. For their tests, the researchers enriched a chocolate drink with either this protein or with casein casein (kā`sēn), well-defined group of proteins found in milk, constituting about 80% of the proteins in cow's milk, but only 40% in human milk. , the primary protein in milk. Casein possesses a low ratio of tryptophan to those competing amino acids. On each of two days, 58 men and women drank one or the other of these drinks both with breakfast and as a late-morning snack. Half the volunteers had a history of deteriorating mood when subjected to acute stress. Around lunchtime, against a backdrop of loud industrial noise, each volunteer spent 20 minutes at a computer screen calculating math sums. The better the volunteer's problem-solving skills, the more challenging--to even insoluble--were the problems given. "Not everyone got stressed" by the tests, as measured by mood and biochemical changes, notes Markus. Most people who showed notable effects were in the stress-vulnerable group. For them, this test-noise combo triggered a marked deterioration in mood, an increased pulse rate, a rise in stress hormones, and a drop in brain serotonin--but only on the day that the volunteers drank the casein-laced chocolate. Markus suspects that chronic stress may deplete de·plete v. 1. To use up something, such as a nutrient. 2. To empty something out, as the body of electrolytes. serotonin, which the tryptophan-rich drink replenishes. His team's findings appear in the June AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION. Richard J. Wurtman of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, and others have shown that spiking brain tryptophan by eating sugar- or starch-rich foods improves some people's moods. However, adding protein to the foods made tryptophan ratios fall, leaving the volunteers again vulnerable to anxiety. Wurtman says, "This important [Dutch] paper shows we shouldn't generalize about the role of proteins based on one or two individual proteins"--like the casein that he and others studied. Indeed, the Dutch study "opens the possibility that people can learn to self-regulate moods through diet," observes Bonnie Spring of the University of Illinois at Chicago This article is about the University of Illinois at Chicago. For other uses, see University of Illinois at Chicago (disambiguation). UIC participates in NCAA Division I Horizon League competition as the UIC Flames in several sports, most notably Basketball. . Her data show that the magnitude of tryptophan changes seen in this study "unquestionably can be produced by changes in the ordinary diet." However, she can't yet offer a nutritionally balanced menu to counter stress. |
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