The Journal of clinical investigation
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Normal human volunteers were intubated with either aspiration tubes or a biopsy capsule placed in the small intestine. The subjects were then fed a test meal containing 50 g of purified bovine serum albumin which served as the model dietary protein. Electrophoretic analysis of intestinal fluids showed that for at least 4 h the fed albumin was detectable in jejunal and ileal fluids. ⋯ While intracellular concentrations of amino acids in the jejunal mucosa did not show significant changes, plasma concentrations of each individual free amino acid were increased after the protein-rich meal and were either decreased or unaltered after the protein-free meal. The amino acid composition of the fed protein was reflected in the increases in intraluminal and plasma concentrations of individual amino acids after the protein-rich meal. It is concluded that after the ingestion of a test meal containing a substantial amount of protein which is within the usual range of dietary intake; (a) the exogenous protein is the principal source of the increased free and peptide amino acids in the intraluminal contents and in the plasma; (b) there are greater amounts of amino acids present as small peptides than in the free form in the gut lumen; (c) the ingested protein can be recovered as late as 4 h both in the jejunum and in the ileum.