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Sulfur Amino Acid Requirement for Lactation in the Rat.
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1958
Year
NutritionExperimental NutritionHuman LactationBody CompositionLactationCystine SupplementationFeed AdditiveMaternal NutritionPublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyNutrient PhysiologyPurified DietsAnimal NutritionEndocrinologyPharmacologyAnimal SciencePhysiologyShort-term Lactation TestMetabolismMedicine
A short-term lactation test has been used to study the effects of cystine supplementation for purified diets containing casein as sole protein source. Supplementation of 12, 18, and 24% casein diets with 0.5% L-cystine markedly improved lactation performance as judged by weaning weights of young and mother. Cystine supplementation of 30% casein diet improved weaning weights of young significantly with less beneficial effects on maternal weight. The data indicate that total sulfur amino acid requirement for optimal lactation in the Long-Evans rat may be placed at slightly more than 1% of the diet and that cystine may furnish at least half of this requirement.