Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Dr. Stuart Phillips on Optimizing Protein Intake for Muscle Growth
Episode Date: April 3, 2024How much protein can your body actually use in one sitting? Is there an upper limit to muscle protein synthesis? Does protein timing really matter? If you're serious about gaining muscle, you...9;ve likely asked these questions and many more like them. To help answer these questions, I interviewed Dr. Stuart Phillips, a world-renowned protein researcher who has published more than 450 peer-reviewed articles. He’s a bonafide protein metabolism expert. In this episode, we discuss the findings of a recent groundbreaking study that challenged the common belief that there's a limit to how much protein your body can use in one meal. Dr. Phillips breaks down the study's surprising results and shares his insights on optimal protein intake for muscle growth. He also delves into other fascinating topics like the role of protein as you age, the anabolic window, and the "first meal effect." Whether you're a bodybuilder, athlete, or simply looking to optimize your fitness, this episode will provide you with cutting-edge and practical information to help you reach your goals. In this podcast, you'll learn about . . . - The upper limit of protein absorption in a single meal and the effects of consuming a massive dose of protein - Protein timing and the duration of the “anabolic window” post-workout - Why protein overfeeding might not be the answer to enhanced muscle gain - The potential differences between protein supplements and whole-food protein source - How aging affects muscle protein synthesis and anabolic resistance - Protein quality and its role in overall health and muscle development. - Practical strategies to optimize your daily protein intake - The role of exercise versus nutrition in muscle growth and health - And more . . . So, click play and get evidence-based recommendations for optimizing your protein intake for health, longevity, and muscle gain. Timestamps: (0:00) Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (3:09) Try Pulse today! Go to https://buylegion.com/pulse and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! (8:14) How much protein can your body absorb and use in one meal? (13:10) How do results compare when splitting up 100g of protein into smaller doses? (17:32) Are multiple protein feedings throughout the day superior for muscle gain? (21:40) Could consuming mixed meals with whole foods affect protein absorption differently than supplements? (24:40) What novel insights did this study provide about muscle protein synthesis? (28:06) Is the muscle-building response to protein impacted by workout timing or training in general? (29:32) Please share the podcast with a friend! www.muscleforlife.show (30:08) Is there an "anabolic window" where your body is more responsive to protein post-workout? (32:14) Should you increase your protein intake on days you train? (35:15) Is there a benefit to consuming a massive amount of protein post-workout? (38:58) How does the muscle-building response to protein change as you age? (41:50) Should you eat more protein as you get older? (44:04) Why is it important to start your day with a high-protein meal? (46:52) What is the "first meal effect" and its significance? (48:24) Is "protein quality" a concern for muscle growth? Mentioned on the Show: The study: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38118410/ Try Pulse today! Go to https://buylegion.com/pulse and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! Stuart Phillips's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mackinprof/ Stuart Phillips's Twitter: https://twitter.com/mackinprof
Transcript
Discussion (0)
They had conditions where they gave people no protein, 25 grams of protein, or 100 grams
of protein, which is a pretty substantial amount of protein.
And they found that actually the 100 gram response was higher in terms of what it did
for muscle than the 25 gram response.
And it was sustained over a very long period of time.
So that sort of bucks the answer that we would have
given, I would have given prior to that paper. Hello there and welcome to Muscle for Life. I
am Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today for a new episode on the topic of protein intake.
And this is a perennial topic, one that will probably always be a matter of curiosity and contention in the 10 years or so that I've been in the fitness industry.
I've been regularly asked the same handful of questions all the way up until today, like how much protein should I be eating to maximize muscle growth?
Is it 0.8 grams per pound of body weight per day?
Is it one gram?
Is it more than one gram?
How much protein can the body digest and absorb in one sitting?
And if you eat more than that, is the excess protein disposed of?
Or is it stored for later use?
Or does something else happen?
Is there an upper limit on muscle protein
synthesis? So maybe the limit is not digestion and absorption, but it is the rate at which the
body's muscle building machinery can work. And does a certain amount of protein maximally stimulate
that? And if you eat more protein than that amount, is the excess again,
disposed of, stored, something else? Protein timing, that's another common question. Does it
really matter when you eat protein, how often you eat protein, how you break up your total daily
protein intake into separate meals? For example, can you eat just one or two large
servings of protein every day and gain just as much muscle and strength as five smaller servings
throughout the day? Well, in today's episode, we are going to explore those questions and get
evidence-based answers. And you are going to be hearing mostly
from my guest, Dr. Stuart Phillips, who is a world-renowned protein researcher with more than
450 published peer-reviewed articles. Dr. Phillips really is a bona fide protein metabolism guru.
And in this episode, he is going to talk about how much protein your body can use in one
meal. He's going to comment specifically on a new study that a lot of people have been talking about
that is challenging the common belief that there is a limit to how much protein your body can use
in one meal. And then Dr. Phillips is going to talk about the role of protein as you age. He talks about the anabolic window, the first meal effect, and more.
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try Pulse risk-free and see what you think. Hey, Stu, it's nice to meet you.
Thanks for having me on the show, Mike. I appreciate it.
Absolutely.
Thank you for taking the time to talk to us about protein metabolism, which sounds maybe
a little bit boring to some listeners, but it's going to be informative and it's going
to be practical.
Just to tee it up, most of the listeners, they know that it's important to eat a fair amount of protein, to eat a high protein diet, to
maximize muscle and strength gain, or even just to support body composition. They understand that.
And most people listening probably understand that the most important factor in protein intake is
just total protein intake. They know that first and foremost, you just have to make sure you eat
enough every day on average. You can have some days higher, some days lower, but on average,
eat enough regardless of how you get there and you're going to do fine. However, many people
ask things like, well, I heard that you can only absorb so much protein in one meal. I remember 10 years ago when I got into the
fitness racket, that was a matter of controversy then and it still is now. From what I've seen,
the discussion has... I remember about 10 years ago, a lot of people thought,
seemed to be generally accepted that you can't absorb more than sometimes the number was
as low as 20. Sometimes it was as high as 50 grams of protein in a meal. And so therefore,
if you eat more than that in one meal, it's just going to be turned into glucose and it's just
going to be eliminated. That's it. And then it seemed to shift maybe after a couple of years of
the evidence-based fitness space gaining traction, there was a shift to, well, you can absorb more than that. We don't really know how much, so don't worry about it too much. is that it's maybe more generally acknowledged that absorption limits are high. Don't even worry
about that. However, if you want to optimize your results, and that's a word that is kind of fuzzy,
it's vague, but if you want to optimize your results, it's best to eat four to five servings
of about the same amount of protein, call it 30 to 50 grams of
protein throughout the day, spaced out by a few hours. And there are different reasons for that.
And I've told people that based on my understanding of different literature. And so I just wanted to
give that as some context for for this discussion because i know
that's where a lot of listeners are at sure so i'm gonna pass the torch sure yeah uh so i mean i
think you know you've you've given it there's there's that kind of brief history of protein
probably not as brief maybe that's about 15 years worth of understanding uh I think there's a few points to sort of hit on. First, to your
point around how much can we absorb? And that was the question a lot of people asked with maybe the
misunderstanding that you can absorb a lot of protein and by a lot, like a lot, you know,
hundreds of grams. That's really not the rate limiting step in any of this,
particularly if you're young and healthy. The key question is how much can your body use of what you
absorb? And I think that that's the 20 to 30 grams, you know, per meal. And a lot of that comes
from work that our lab has done and others uh kind of showing that the response of say
protein synthesis and muscle which is you know the making of new muscle um plateaus at a certain
point it's it's what we call dose saturable or whatever um and so then people were like well
you can only digest it i'm like no backup you can a lot. It's how much you can use. And that's obviously a nuanced answer to the point that bigger people could probably store
more and use more protein than smaller people.
So it's not an absolute amount.
I mean, every protein requirement we always give is divided by per kilogram of body weight.
So we're per pound of body weight.
is divided by per kilogram of body weight, so or per pound of body weight. So let's just say,
with regards to your statement, yeah, I agree. Daily protein intake is the number one variable.
Twice the RDA, so 1.6 grams per kilo or about 0.7 grams per pound, you're going to get a lot of the benefit. That's definitely a lot more than the minimum, which is the RDA or 0.8 or about 0.3 grams per pound. And that's number one.
And the subtlety is, how much should I sit down and eat or meal? And I'd have been one of the people that would have told you, just like you
said, 30 grams, maybe 40 each meal. First meal of the day, pretty important. Second meal of the day,
probably okay. Last meal of the day, depending on how close it is to bedtime, maybe that's a pretty
big meal as well. And you can probably squeeze in one more, I call it feeding occasion. So let's say
a snack, mid-afternoon snack, late night snack, something like that. And then there was things
like maybe eat something closer to the time you go to bed. And then things changed quite
drastically recently with a good friend of mine, Jorn Trommelin. I was actually Jorn's external
examiner for his PhD. So I guess I'm partially responsible for unleashing him on the world.
He works with a good friend of mine, Luke Van Loon over in the Netherlands. And he just published a
study that I think caused a lot of people to go, oh, hold on, this is different than we've heard and we've understood. So without
diving too deep into the details, let's just say that they had conditions where they gave people
no protein, 25 grams of protein, or 100 grams of protein, which is a pretty substantial amount
of protein. And they found that actually the 100 gram response was higher
in terms of what it did for muscle than the 25 gram response. And it was sustained over a very
long period of time. So that sort of bucks the, I guess, answer that we would have given, I would
have given prior to that paper that it's kind of capped at around 25 30 grams that you can
to definitely digest takes a long time longer um and uh use more prateep i would love to get into
some of the details of this paper that i think will help people understand what you just said
and put it into context of other things, especially people who
spend a bit of time doing desk research themselves. They're probably thinking to
some of the research we've alluded to, some of the research on intermittent fasting that has
indicated that yes, you can absolutely gain muscle and strength if you restrict yourself to just
maybe two feedings of protein per day. But if you're trying to maximize muscle
and strengthening, so let's say you're a natural weightlifter, you're an experienced weightlifter,
it's already hard enough to gain muscle and strength as it is, and you're trying to gain
every little edge you can, that IF is probably not going to be the best choice for you that more
frequent feedings. And so, um, in this study,
so we had this, this a hundred gram feeding of protein. How did those results compare?
It's probably not surprising in some respects that it beat, it beat out 25 grams, but, um,
you mentioned that it takes longer to digest. So are we looking at a cumulative effect over time?
And what are your thoughts on how that might compare to taking that 100 grams of protein and splitting it up into a few different
feedings? Yeah. So first, I think the biggest thing is that that paper, one takeaway is that
we can digest 100 grams. So to the point of you can digest a lot, that's a pretty big, I think, thing that people go,
oh, wow, I never knew.
But we knew that for some time.
So the digestion is not an issue.
It does take longer.
Definitely the smaller dose is much more easily digested.
Need to be clear on a couple of things.
It's not real food. It was
just milk protein. So it's a contrived sort of circumstance, but we'll gloss over that for now.
Let's just say that dividing it up would have been how I would recommend things.
But when you divide the doses, still the 100 grams begins to come out on top the
differences are are small i would call them um and i definitely think what people need to take away
is that you know the primary driver of you know accumulating new muscle is definitely the weight
lifting that's let's be clear on that and that the the protein is the the glaze on the cake or the
the icing on the cake or the sprinkles on the icing,
I'm not really sure what, but it adds, I'll call it the finishing touch, if you like.
From that standpoint, then, it really does appear, to your point, that this sort of
intermittent fasting or OMAD, like one meal a day type eating, is not as, I'll call it, you know, detrimental for your gains as we once
thought. And I would have been one person who would have said, you know, if you had to pick,
like, I'm not opposed to intermittent fasting, if that's your thing, and definitely very good for
body composition. I just said, but I don't know that it's the right way to optimize muscle mass
gains.
This paper has changed my mind on that.
And I think that a lot of people go, oh, you were wrong.
And I was like, yeah, man.
I've been wrong a lot in my career as a scientist.
But that's how science works, right? You have a theory and you have some data until something comes along and supersedes it.
Lest you turn into David Lustig or other people.
Well, or other people, yeah.
No, it's a good example.
I said it, not you.
Yeah, yeah, no, fair.
But yeah, dogmatic belief is fine,
but in the face of evidence to the contrary,
you can't, I don't think anyway,
call yourself a scientist and say,
I just don't believe that.
I'm like, you know what, you know, you just have to, and, and, and to try and integrate it. So,
you know, I think that there's a, uh, uh, one big lesson that came and it's that, you know,
this sort of meal timing that I've talked about, lots of others have talked about through it today
is probably, uh, less important than we once said for conditioning and gaining muscle.
It's a short-term study. It was a study that's done over hours, like basically a day,
not the sort of timeframe that it takes to gain muscle. So that's where I say to people,
amazing study. I don't know that there's another lab in the world that could pull this off, and these
guys did it.
Just take it for what it is.
It's an acute response, which we've done lots of as well, so I'm not dismissing it.
But take it for what it is.
There's sometimes a disconnect between that type of study and what actually happens to muscle in the long
run but uh i'm i'm one that's a little bit more comfortable saying that people say i eat one meal
a day that's what i do and i'm like okay you know and to your to your point uh empirically we know
that those people can get stronger uh they can gain muscle. They can certainly, they, they get very lean, uh, if they're adhering
to it. Um, so yeah, that's, that's the good news, but take away from that study for sure.
And so if I'm hearing you correctly, um, this study may not overturn the, it's, it's a small
body of evidence, but it still is a body of evidence nonetheless that does suggest that, or at least that has supported the position that multiple feedings throughout the day is probably best for optimizing muscle and strength gain.
Am I right?
Or not?
Or are you even rethinking like, you know, actually, maybe that's not the case. And if that's the case, I'd love to hear maybe just some of your thoughts as to why that has been suggested. There is evidence to support that. And at least there are a handful of papers I can think of that I've read that seem to make a good case for that yeah well i mean a lot of it to
do with the protein is is that i mean uh you know everything has has evolved if you're a fish or a
bird or a mammal you always have a mechanism to take nitrogen off of an amino acid and turn it
into something if you're a fish you make ammonia you make uric acid if you're a bird, and we make urea. And every organism has a mechanism for that. So we've always said,
you've got to use the amino acids, the protein when it's ingested, or it's useless or used less.
And I would still think that that's partially true anyway, but this,
what this paper showed is that, uh, even if you took a huge meal, so a hundred grams of
protein, um, and again, it's milk protein.
So it's, it's a little different than food, food, uh, an egg or, or, uh, meat or chicken
or something like that.
So we still don't know the answer to the question if
it's a meal. But I would say that the small meals still fit within the scheme. I think what this
adds is that it doesn't need to be small meals. It can be one big meal. And there probably is far
less of a difference between those than we once
thought. So I'm not saying that the multiple feedings per day is bad or I don't think it's
worse than even though statistically in the study they showed it was slightly lower. I don't think
that those differences are overly meaningful. So maybe you can worry less about, oh, I missed my feed at this time. I didn't have
this. Can I make up for it at a subsequent meal? And then I'm like, oh, I'm pressed for time.
Actually, I've really got this one meal that I'm going to make count. And this paper would say, you know what? It's probably far less of an issue
than we once thought in that one meal is going to do the job.
Another practical use case here is vacation or if you're traveling and you're not going to eat
four to six, 20, 30 gram servings of protein per day. It's not going to happen.
And so if you can only get in, I mean, I'm 190 pounds. So if I could, if I, I mean,
if it's only a few days, if I could just get one meal of a hundred grams of protein, I mean,
I'm fine. I'm fine for, for if I were to do that every day on average and train
really hard and not quite optimal, but, uh, it's, it's nice to know that again, a vacation is
another, it's just a perfect example, uh, where I tend to not eat much in the mornings. And cause
I know there's always going to be dinners. And so maybe, maybe lunch is just that kind of protein
meal, get that out of the way so I can just enjoy dinner and that that's feasible. And then as you said, just in day-to-day living, we get busy and okay, you missed a meal. It's not a big deal. Oh, you missed two meals even. It's not a big point. You've added that caveat a couple of times.
People might be wondering, why might that change things?
Why might a mixed meal, which is typically how people are eating most of their protein,
why might that produce a different outcome?
Yeah.
So first, I mean, I think the important point with saying about milk protein
is milk is a mixture of two proteins, whey, which I think most people have heard of because it's the
supplement that they take, and casein. Casein is a slowly, what we call slowly digested protein. So
that is 80% of the milk protein that these guys fed in this study.
And so it's this sort of, in the classic years, is that whey gives up its amino acids
fast and then it sort of slowly trickles off.
Whereas casein is a slow digested protein and it's, you know, just the amino acids appear
slower.
So I think that that's an important point is that you're eating
100 grams. So 80 grams of that meal is a slow digested protein. That's casein.
Meals, when you eat them and you have generally, let's say a sandwich. So there's two pieces of,
you know, if you're okay eating carbohydrates, there's two pieces. I always have to,
I never used to think about it that people go i just don't eat carbs i'm like
okay well so we're gonna go with the traditional that's a that's a big life mistake but okay
yeah well you know it's i was like whatever i was like well we're we're gonna go with what
we usually call a sandwich so there's two pieces of bread or maybe two pieces of lettuce yeah yeah not not the lettuce
or or two patties and a chicken breast in the middle that's that's not a sandwich that's just
a triple decker in my big you know um so two pieces of bread and you know the the meat in between
um those are those are also digested slowly but the rates of appearance of the amino acids are
sort of far less predictable.
They sort of do this kind of thing, and then they peak and they come down. That's what mixed meals look like. And so that's a different rate of appearance of the building blocks of muscle and
other protein-containing tissues, which could change the answer to the question. So I think
that it's just important to appreciate that still awesome research, but it's milk protein. That's a pretty specific type
of protein. And it may be a little bit different with meals. I have no reason to suspect that it's
wildly different, but I can't give you the exact answer. In my heart of hearts i want to say is that they're probably
not overly dissimilar um but uh and and look you know uh a year or two from now i i would fully
expect that some of these questions might be answered so but you'll you'll have to stay tuned
on that one at least some people listening probably have heard that your body's muscle building machinery,
so to speak, it only can work so quickly. It only has so much capacity for muscle protein synthesis.
And they've probably heard that somewhere around, I know it might seem like I'm moving backward here, but I'm not. I'll get to the new question. They've probably heard that 50-ish grams or so seems to bring it to max RPMs, so to speak, that appears to elevate muscle protein synthesis rates as high as they're going to go. And then they've probably also heard that muscle
protein synthesis rates only remain elevated for so long in response to one feeding. And so these
are some of the points that kind of some of the building blocks of that argument for more frequent
feedings. And so what in this study was revelatory in terms of that model, because for this study's findings to be true,
then there was something mechanistically that was missing, or there was a misunderstanding of some
kind. Yeah, I think the biggest thing is that previously, and I think this is pretty well
established, that when you eat food, amino acids go up in your bloodstream, protein synthesis goes up, but then protein synthesis shuts off. And to your point is that even in the face of
sustained amino acids, we just don't continue to make more and more protein.
When you perform resistance exercise, your muscle is sensitized to the effects of protein being around.
It just becomes much more sort of, I call it much more sponge-like and sort of taking out protein.
I think the biggest thing that this study shows is that actually that shut-off mechanism
is kind of removed. So the response is still long-lasting and in concordance then with elevated amino acids as
well. So it doesn't shut off. It just keeps going. I mean, one of the things that I do point out when
I say to people, they're like, well, so more and more protein begets more. And the title of the
paper, which I think was a bit of an overstatement, there is no upward limit to anabolism,
which I think was a bit of an overstatement.
There is no upward limit to anabolism is incorrect.
I mean, the implications- It makes for good headlines.
It's great.
It's a great headline.
Yeah, absolutely.
But I mean, if that were true,
then eating more and more and more and more
would make you more and more and bigger and bigger.
I wish, I wish.
We would just eat 500 grams of protein a day
and we would cut our weightlifting in half and we would just, that's all you got to do. Yeah. Hook myself up
to an intravenous feed and eat and just like I grow forever. And so clearly the mechanisms to
be able to deaminate amino acids and get rid of the stuff that you're eating would upregulate or
we die. But we just don't keep putting on muscle ad infinitum
based on how much protein we eat. So that's the practical part of it. But that shutoff mechanism
in response to amino acids is clearly overridden by the exercise itself. So I think that that's
an important message that came out of the paper,
for sure. And for people wondering specifically, are you referring to post-workout, which is also something I wanted to get to, so maybe that's a good segue, or are you just referring to
somebody who just generally resistance trains, or is this more of a timing thing?
Yeah. So one thing that we do know is that if you're untrained, you're fairly novice,
you do a resistance bout and that sort of that big sensitization, that anabolic window, we call it,
or people call it, is open for a long time, probably like a couple of days. The more trained
you get, the window gets a little bit shorter. It's still, you know, if you're doing a pretty
intense resistance workout, it's probably 12 hours or so. So it's not, you don't have to have the protein immediately post
workout. So we say, you know, somewhere around the workout, when you've got amino acids there,
your muscle's going to make use of them. I still favor post exercise because I mean,
personally, I'll just say this is that, I mean, I'm much more receptive to drinking and having something in my stomach after than before.
Yep, same.
So that's the time when we talk about, you know, reconditioning and repairing and remodeling and all of the things that go along with protein.
So I'll just say it's generic to sort of generally working out, but the post-exercise period is what we're talking about here.
And, you know, elevated amino acids, protein just keeps hammering on.
Hey there, if you are hearing this, you are still listening, which is awesome.
Thank you.
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And just to point up this anabolic window, which that concept used to imply that if you wait too long, the window closes and it's too late.
And of course, that's not true.
wait too long, the window closes and it's too late. And of course that's not true. But to your point, even in an experienced weightlifter, you're still, I think you said 12 hours or so, you're
still looking at a 12 hour window where your body has a heightened response to protein. And so
practically speaking, that's the entire day's worth of uh protein probably
if somebody's training first thing in the morning you know you you would hope so uh i mean 12 hours
is a long time and and it's again it's sort of you know like i still see and it's predominantly
the guys with a shaker in the gym and it's like, you know, slamming it.
And I'm not saying that's a poor practice because-
Either that or it's BCAAs.
Yeah, yeah.
And, you know, like it's sort of like that's water on top of a bucket of water, but whatever.
Tasty water, what do you mean?
Yeah, sure.
Go for it.
But, you know, the bottom line to me is, you know, if you don't have that or if you're like, oh, I've got to do this, I've got to run, don't sweat it.
You're still going to be able to make use of it.
And I don't know if it's 12 hours.
It could be 16.
But it's not one or 30 minutes.
It's not like the window opens and then three hours later it's like shut and you've missed the opportunity.
You know, that window is, I got to find the right, I talk about this so much.
There's a paper out there that some colleagues and friends of mine have written and they talk about the post-exercise garage door.
Like it's wide, it's long, you know, it's big.
door. It's wide, it's long, it's big. And that's probably a more apt analogy than the window that's transiently open that shuts. That's not how things are working. And just to make it clear for
listeners, I haven't heard anything that suggests that eating a large amount of protein after training, most people, I think it just
becomes a habit where you're going to probably eat a meal within a couple of hours of working
out. Typically, that's how it is for most people. Changing that from, let's say currently that meal
is 30 grams of protein or maybe it's 50, that making it 100 grams is not going to be better or worse.
There isn't a particular reason, it sounds like, to rejigger your meal plan to provide 100 grams
of protein after training rather than maybe 30 and then a few hours later, another 30 and so forth.
Yeah. I mean, to be absolutely crystal clear on this point, within the paper itself, there
was a statistically significantly greater anabolic response with the large meal.
So I don't want to dismiss statistical significance, which sometimes I live and die by.
The point again is to say that's the acute effect.
And so I'm going to gloss over that and say that that's far less important than I need to get 100 versus I'm going to do the multiple smaller meals, which I still think is fine.
And yes, so to your, yeah, the short answer to your question is it's not an issue.
So if you want to eat like that, no problem.
But certainly don't go, oh, like this 30, 40 gram meal or whatever, that's just useless now.
I need to get 100.
That's, yeah, it's not a good idea.
Yeah.
In my opinion, unless that's what you want to do,
because everybody goes, actually, I have no issues with that. It's what I do
at least two or three days a week. And I get it, timing, convenience, et cetera, et cetera.
I don't think you're giving anything up is the big deal in doing that. So that's one thing that
to come back to it is that we've learned from this
study is that not to worry so much about, I'm like, I'm missing the opportunity.
I didn't have my, you know, slam the protein shake if that's what you've got or get a big
meal or, you know, and you're going to be okay.
Like it's still, you're turning the gears and you're getting the benefit back for sure.
Well, de novo lipogenesis, it occurs. You have to eat so much carbohydrate really to gain fat. So why don't I bring my dietary fat down to nothing and eat nothing but protein and carbs? And it
didn't work. And so some people might, I mean, I think it's actually a valid question to ask.
Say, okay, so I train and I have a period of heightened sensitivity to protein. And that off switch is jammed.
It's just on, basically.
And so would it not be beneficial?
So let's say currently I train.
And then by the time that garage door closes, I've eaten my final, that's my final 100 grams
of protein for the day.
Or maybe it's my final 75 or something like that. Um, should I play around with my, my meal plan so I can eat a lot of protein in the let's,
let's just even say in the six hours or maybe 10 hours that follows training, should I try to eat
200 grams of protein or 300 grams of protein? Yeah. Yeah. I could see, I could see somebody thinking like,
I mean, if I'm just going to, if I can, if I can, uh, just maximize muscle protein,
since this is my body doesn't know how to stop. Um, what if I, what if I protein overfeed after
I train? Yeah. Well, I think one, one thing is, um, like there, there's, there probably is an
upper limit to digestion.
We may not have found it.
Clearly, 100 grams is-
I'll just drink away.
I'm going to drink.
Yeah, yeah.
Just get a whole bottle.
At some point, I think you're going to find that that doesn't happen, is you can't absorb
it all.
But let's say you could.
Like I said, practically speaking, you've only got so much muscle.
Even if the off switch is jammed and it's like, I'm just going to keep making, you keep doing that, your body will upregulate all of the systems to make urea, to oxidize amino acids.
It just, it's an impossible scenario to sustain.
it's just it's an impossible scenario to sustain so what happens and we've known this for probably about 60 years is that um and some pretty well done experiments to say if you gave people big
meals then on the other side when they weren't eating they went into a big catabolic state they
basically compensated on the other side so then people say oh i'll just keep eating and so that
was the sort of that's where where the BCAs come in.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. You just never stop, right? All you do is that everything that disposes of
amino acids, all of those mechanisms get massively up or, you know, you'd run into health
issues. So, uh, let's just say that, um, you can try it. Uh, I, I doubt that it'll give you more
than what you're getting and to, and to take people back to, I like to use the bake the cake
analogy, right? Lifting the weights and doing it regularly
bakes the cake. You want to ice the cake, that's the protein. You can put a thick layer of icing
on when you're a novice, and the more trained you get, the icing gets thinner. So just remember
where we're playing when we're talking about some of these variables
is that people believe it's it's an unlock to to muscle gains beyond and i'm like ah that's
you're doing that by lifting the weights the protein is it's the glaze on top or the
the cream on the glaze or or something like that it's not that it's not the be all and end all. Going to the gym, doing it regularly,
caloric surplus probably if you want to gain, and then the protein, and then all of the other
nuances are underneath that. And when I say protein, I mean daily protein intake.
Absolutely. Does any of this change any of the stuff we've been discussing
with age as we as we get older yeah
yeah well as i've gotten older i could tell you know personally but um yes probably it does uh
you know it's one thing that we know uh as you get older the capacity to be anabolic uh is diminished
we call it anabolic resistance uh share shares some parallels, I'm sure, with insulin
resistance. You're not as sensitive to the stimulus of insulin. In this case,
you're not as sensitive to the stimulus of lifting weights, for starters, protein, number two.
And then the two combined, you just don't do as great a job as you did when you were the younger version of you.
Everybody wants to know where it starts.
I'd like to be able to tell you it starts at around age 57.
That's just a personal observation.
But I have no idea.
I don't do as much.
I don't lift as heavy.
I don't lift the type of volume I did when I was 20.
So that's
probably part of it because it hurts. So all bets are off when we talk about aging, but the dial
eventually is getting turned down. And the only thing you can do is to choose to age sort of in
this slow, gradual fashion, as opposed to this and and and weight lifting
resistance exercise any higher protein diet or the two i i think two key parts of trying to sustain
that but yeah you're never going to get back and look be able to do all the things you you did in
your 20s right my god that's ridiculous amount of time in the gym was in my 20s what else
what else was going to do i don't know i don't know and you thought when you did it you were
like i'm busy and i'm like like hell you're back but yeah so it's 1 a.m and you've been in the gym
for three hours like i know if i had a message from the from my 20 year old self it was like
first you're not busy.
Second, you can probably get that workout done in a lot less time.
And third, all the people that you thought you were meeting in the gym, blah, blah, blah, all those things.
I mean, it's just – but yeah, no.
Aging, I wish we could – I could tell you there's something.
We could turn it back.
You mean we can't just take NMN and uh and reverse reverse our biological age still still nothing uh nothing in a pill uh maybe slow maybe slow things down but nothing in a pill is gonna you know turn
it back or you know reverse age or anything else like that. So exercise is number one. Good diet,
have some friends, live well, yada, yada. And as for protein intake, is there anything though that
ideally you would change? Like you mentioned a higher protein diet. So as we get older,
should we still be thinking with, for example, 0.7 grams per
pound per day?
No reason to go above that.
Um, any, anything with individual feedings or distribution or.
Yeah, I, I, again, uh, uh, that number I think is universal.
There's nothing that's out there that makes me think that you're getting more.
If you, I just don't see the difference. And I'm like, a lot of people, I stick at this sort of lower
end, even though it's higher than what's recommended. And a lot of people are like,
oh, you should go up to this. And I'm like, if that's your thing, I'm not telling you not to
do it. But what I am telling you is that there's nothing. and I mean 0.0 evidence that we have that 1.6 versus
0.7 versus 2.2 grams per kilo or one gram per pound, that this is better than this. So there's
no study out there that shows it. There's a couple that are trying, no difference. So you make your
mind up. I mean, I think that the quality of the protein may begin to matter, but if you're still active
and lifting and doing all the things that I'm telling you to do as you get older, that's
a far bigger stimulus to keep yourself anabolically sensitive than to keep trying to pour protein
on top.
But it's still, remember, it's still two times what
we're recommending. And so there'd be another camp of people that would be looking at me like
I have two heads and say, that's an enormous amount of protein. And I spent enough time on
social media to run into those people as well. And I'm like, well, that's the protein intake of 95% of college-aged males on
campus. They easily meet that, no problem. So you can call it enormous. And I'm like, well,
I got 33,000 undergrads, about half of which are men, and they're hitting that without a thought.
So you can call it enormous. I just don't think it is. Even women who, in my experience, when they start lifting weights and start learning about this
stuff, typically are eating less protein than the average guy in my experience. And so there's a
short period of adjustment where they go, wow, I'm supposed to eat 80 grams of protein per day.
I'm eating 30 right now. And then so
initially it can feel like a lot, although I also have heard from many of them over the years who
like how much fuller they feel and then they quickly get used to and they go, oh, okay.
So if I just make sure that I start my day with a nice serving of protein, that's pretty easy.
Then I just have to get in a couple more. But if I'm only at 15 grams of protein by dinner, then that's when it's more difficult.
Yeah. You hit on a key point. I think it probably is, I'll call it underappreciated.
Every single study that's been done, like the one we talked about, the Tromelin paper and the ones
that we've done and lots of other labs, and it's not too many of us that do these types of studies.
We bring people in after an overnight fast and then we feed them. So it's a first meal effect
in about, I'd say about 90 to 95% of the work that's out there. So if that first meal is, you know, AM breakfast, fair enough. But just,
that's an important point to remember, because I think that, I think that that meal is like,
you know, the most important meal of the day. It doesn't have to be breakfast, but
whatever your first meal is, and you break your fast, then that needs to be a, I'll call it a
patterning meal or something that sort of
sets the tone for the rest of the day. So it should be higher in protein. And to your point,
Mike, I think that this is, you know, a lot of people out there, they do, you know, that's their
smallest protein meal. And so if that's very carb rich and very high in fiber. If you're following the heart healthy guidelines, it supposedly should be.
Then lunch is maybe sort of an edge up.
And then dinner is this big meal.
And sometimes it is tougher to make up.
But I think so thinking more about protein containing foods.
So Greek style yogurt, skier.
It's okay to have an egg.
We've taken them off the dirt list. They're okay for you at that first meal and to really sort of kickstart the response.
And I think that's something that most people just sort of maybe haven't realized with a lot
of the work. But a good friend of mine, Don Lehman, he emphasizes this all the
time. It's a first meal effect. And that's an important point, I think, for your listeners,
for sure. And just to follow up on that, is that mostly just, you mentioned a patterning effect
where it kind of sets the tone, okay, we've started with some protein and then now we're
already maybe one third to our goal for the day or something, or are there some physiological
reasons you say that? Yeah, I wish I could give you some great, insightful physiology answer,
but all I can tell you is that when we look at all of the studies that have always been done, and it's just a control issue to say this, that we start people fasted, and then they
work out, and we feed them more, we feed them, then they work out.
It's just a much, I'll call it, cleaner experimental model to do it that way.
So that's how we've done it.
But when we do the subsequent feeding, we do have some data that's in process right now,
which will show that it's probably far less important than that first meal effect, if you like.
I can't really explain it other than it's the time when your muscle is sort of, you know,
it's been without food and nutrients for some period of time.
And that enhances to a degree some of the
sensitivity that it's going to respond to. So the second effect is like, well, you know,
we've seen that stuff before, like, you know, we're not as responsive as we were.
Working out definitely takes some of the brakes off of that. But I think that that first meal is
key and pretty critical in the response. Interesting. You mentioned quality of protein.
Can you speak quickly to that?
Just because that's also an ongoing,
I thought the incomplete protein myth finally died.
It has not.
It's still very alive.
It has, it's dead.
It's pretty much dead.
Like, you know, vegan versus, you know,
meat and everything. And it's just a preference issue.
And whatever your schema for... I'm an omnivore, so I'll just cop to that. I see the merits in
both ways of eating. You do whatever you want to do. My point is when you get to about 1.6 grams per kilo per day or 0.7 grams per
pound, that issue becomes a completely moot point. And lots of people on all kinds of social media
platforms say, but plant proteins are deficient. Like, no, plant proteins are not deficient. They
might be lower, but they're not deficient. And when we eat
complementary proteins and we sort of eat mixed meals, which is what most people do,
then it becomes a non-issue very, very quickly. There might be some sort of small, and when I say
small, like really in the margin type stuff, sort of the statistical difference between the 100 gram and the 25 gram. And I'm thinking, that's not something that we all need to sort of run away and say,
plant proteins are inferior to. Everything that we've done, where we compare the two of them
head to head, and lots of other work from got to start up, but Luke Van Loon's lab is another
great one for doing this.
The differences become very, very small. As you get older, it might become a bigger issue.
But I still think then that the main driver and the thing that you can do to sort of make that
kind of a non-issue is to lift some weights and be physically active. And then things become very, yeah,
inconsequential as far as the way that you're going to gain muscle.
To that point of, as you get older, it may or may not matter. The way that most people eat,
most people are omnivores as well. And so probably the majority of the protein is going to come from, I mean, at least
50%, it's going to come from animal products, whether it's meat or dairy or whatever. And then
there's a lot of kind of complimentary or supplementary protein, so to speak, that you
can get in beans and legumes and seeds and other things. And so if I'm hearing you right, then a person who's eating that way has no reason,
regardless of age, to force themselves to maybe eat even more animal protein when they actually
like. They like the way they're eating right now. They don't want to have to eat more animal
products. And then also if you have somebody who's vegetarian,
the same would go for them is that that's under the assumption that they are getting to
the right amount of protein. And if they are doing that, they're probably being deliberate
about some of the foods they're eating because it is kind of hard to do if you just randomly eat
yummy plant foods. There's probably some fish in there
or some tofu or tempeh or they'd put some thought into it. And then for a vegan eater, that has to
happen or you don't get very far if you don't put a little bit of thought into your meal plan to get
enough protein. Yeah. Well, so you hit all the concepts that I think are important. First is the total amount of food. And I think that this is some of the harder part, I think, for as people get older, their appetite goes down. They tend not to eat as much. If you're vegan, you need to be a bit judicious about how you pick your foods. And so you can't just sort of you know think oh it doesn't it's inconsequential um yeah i saw some i saw some woman on youtube she eats 100 bananas a
day yeah yeah you know okay but does she but does she are you sure yeah or does she just say she
does yeah well you know i just i don't want to be too skeptical, but that sounds a bit of a stretch.
Yeah, I mean, you know, you can be a crummy omnivore and not eat the right foods, just like you can be a crummy vegetarian and a crummy vegan, right?
You know, a can of Diet Coke and a slice of Wonder Bread is still a vegan diet, but
it's not good nutrition.
but it's not good nutrition. So most vegans and or vegetarians that I have interacted with,
and particularly those that are athletic, they're very careful about how they plan their diets.
Not all, but most, and they have a pretty good working knowledge of what they might be quote unquote deficient in. But the arguments that I hear a lot on social media about,
oh, you're eating plants, they're poison,
they've got poisons in them.
That's even worse.
Yeah, I hate it so much.
First, that's terrible.
And then they go, and it's deficient.
And I'm like, no, it's not.
They're like, well, it's low in.
And I'm like, but then you eat more.
And they're like, but yeah, you're not getting nutrients. And I'm like but then you eat more and they're like but yeah you're not getting
nutrients and i'm like okay we're done like it's but yeah the plants do the plants are trying to
kill you why would you eat them they're trying to kill you well it becomes it's it's um i mean
it takes on uh you know forgive me but almost sort of religious overtones in the way that you
eat and and i think yeah the the people that are talking like that have just lost the plot a little bit about
what food is all about besides the fact that it's nutrition should also be enjoyed. And if you enjoy
eating that way, then who am I to tell you to do something different? Well, I know we are coming up
on time, so I don't want to run over. And that went by quickly.
That was a great discussion.
Touched on all the key points I wanted to ask you about.
So why don't we quickly wrap up with, well, first, let me just ask, I know there's a few
more minutes.
So is there anything that I should have asked?
Anything else you'd like to say that you didn't get to say yet?
I don't think so.
that you didn't get to say yet? I don't think so. I mean, I still,
when people ask me about a lot about nutrition, I'm like, and people get upset when I say this,
I'm like, I think it's a pretty, I'll call it from a health standpoint, a distant number two to being physically active. Once you dial the physical activity and particularly the strength
training, resistance training, and a lot of things fall in place.
The nutrition, not that it's unimportant, but for mere mortals, and I put myself very
much in that category and not in this sort of, I'm trying to squeeze out the last drop
of juice.
But if you are in that part of the thing, then some of what I'm talking about, what
we're talking about is a bigger deal.
But for most folks, get to the gym and do it regularly. And then the eating part is the,
that's discipline number two in my mind. But protein, once you get to the total amount,
all the rest becomes sort of, I'll call them sub-details underneath that total amount,
if you like rule. That's a great point on the exercise. It reminds
me of just a point I've made. I've written about it. I've spoken about it, referencing some
research and basically saying, hey, based on my understanding here, exercise is the most important
thing. And it looks like if you exercise regularly and you maintain a healthy body composition,
and that's a range, you don't have to be shredded, but maintain a healthy body composition, that will negate,
it appears, a lot of the negative effects associated with a poor diet.
I'm not saying to eat a poor diet.
It's better to do it all.
But to your point, first and foremost, you have to stay active.
And it's interesting having discussions with people where some people are looking for the magic pill. That's one level of
fantasy. And then there are people who are, okay, they've accepted there is no magic pill,
but they're looking for the magic diet, the magic food. And in those discussions I've had, I've tried to explain this point of,
well, we could talk about diet, but you're not exercising at all. And really what you need to
be doing is exercising. And so I actually don't care. Let's not do too many things at once.
Eat the way you're eating. Let's not change any of that. And let's just get you exercising. And
there's resistance there because that's harder to do then can i just make some little inconsequential change
to my yeah can i start eating a brazil a brazil nut every day uh can't can't that fix all of my
problems like what do you mean so um anyway anyway just i agree 100 no you're you're spot on
you're you're spot on i i yeah i i'm'm a big believer too that if you don't have the physical activity dialed in, not that changing your eating habits is a poor idea. I just don't think that you're... And everybody then wants to talk about weight loss. And I'm like, yeah.
So beyond this sort of, and not to be too myopic on weight loss as the, and not just a part of healthy living, I think that being physically active is like hands down is the
number one activity you can do for your health and your, I don't know, dare I say longevity
or health span, but you get my point.
I think we're both drinking the Kool-Aid.
Non-negotiable.
Okay. Well, anyways, this was a great discussion. Why don't we just wrap up quickly with where people can find you if they want to check out some of your work,
some of your research, anything in particular you want them to know?
Sure. Yeah. I'm on, uh, I'm on Twitter, uh, X, uh, whatever it is. Yeah. Yeah. Um, I'm on
Instagram. Um, I'm on Tik TOK really on Tik TO TikTok just to really piss my son off, my youngest son, who said
old people ruin TikTok.
So as an old person-
You're doing your part.
You're fighting a good fight, actually.
I am ruining the platform for people like my son.
I am Mackinprof, M-A-C-K-I-N-P-R-O-F.
I'm on LinkedIn and Facebook as well.
So I think that sort of covers it.
I'm really bad at TikTok. I'm okay at
Instagram. I kind of do my best work on X, I think. I like X the most too, because it's a
text-first platform, which is, I like writing stuff. So yeah, I'll be honest, I've perused
TikTok and I find it shocking. It's brain damaging. I downloaded it and. I've, I've perused Tik TOK and, and it, I find it shocking. So it's brain damaging.
I, I, I downloaded it and then I signed up and then I, uh, I uninstalled it that I'm in the same
day. And I know, and that was the end of it. I'm on it and I'm on it basically. Cause a lot
of my students that I mentor, they say, Oh, you got this off of Tik TOK. And I just, yeah.
All right. Well, I know you have to TikTok. Yeah. All right.
Well, I know you have to run.
So I want to thank you again for your time.
My pleasure, Mike.
Thanks very much for having me on the show.
Appreciate it.
Absolutely.
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