If you think that whey protein is superior to for bodybuilding purposes,
you may be shocked when you read this article.
Accounting 101: Protein Balance
First, let’s begin by talking about accounting.
Protein, whether we’re talking about the protein that makes up your own tissues,
or that supplied by food, consists of amino acids linked together in chains.
Amino acids are the principle means by which we get nitrogen –an essential
element in your survival.
Building bigger muscles is about balance –protein balance. If your body makes
more muscle protein than it breaks down (i.e., a positive protein balance)
your muscles will increase in size and strength with time. Conversely, if
you make less muscle protein than you break down (i.e., a negative protein
balance), your muscles will tend to get weaker and smaller.
Scientists refer to ‘building up’ (synthetic) processes as ‘anabolism’ or
‘anabolic’; ‘catabolism’, or ‘catabolic’ processes, in contrast, involve
breaking down tissue structures. Thus, a positive protein balance indicates
an anabolic state.
A Positive Protein Balance is Essential to Building Bigger Muscles
Since protein contains nitrogen, we can estimate your protein balance by
measuring your nitrogen balance. Technically speaking, however, the two should
not be considered equal. In any case, a positive nitrogen balance is generally
taken as a sign of an anabolic state with an overall gain (retention) of
nitrogen for the day, whereas a negative nitrogen balance indicates a catabolic
state.
Another, arguably more accurate, way to estimate your protein balance is
by measuring your body’s balance of a particular amino acid, such as leucine.
A positive leucine balance indicates protein anabolism. Or, at least, a positive
leucine balance reflects a state (i.e., increased availability of leucine
inside your muscle cells) that supports protein anabolism. Conversely,
a negative leucine balance suggests protein catabolism (‘breaking down’).
Simply stated, a positive leucine balance is ‘good’; a negative leucine balance,
‘bad’, for the purpose of building bigger muscles.
Maintaining Muscle Protein Balance
You don’t eat all the time; there are gaps in your protein intake, such as
in between meals and while you sleep.
So how does your body preserve its protein balance? How does it keep your
‘Protein Economy’ (the total amount of protein in your body) from shrinking
--and your muscles alongside-- in the face of fluctuating intakes of dietary
protein?
Your body maintains its protein balance largely by adjusting tissue protein
breakdown according to how much protein you feed it (for review see Garlick
et al., 1999).
In between meals (e.g., overnight), you lose tissue (e.g., muscle) protein,
but after a protein-containing meal, you recoup what you lost through a decrease
in protein breakdown. The production, or synthesis, of tissue protein often
stays about the same after a protein-containing meal (Melville et al., 1989;
Price et al., 1994; Garlick et al., 1999), yet because protein breakdown
is reduced, the result is a net increase (gain) in protein such that balance
is achieved. You don’t get bigger, but you don’t shrink, either.
In order to actually make your muscles bigger and stronger, you’ve got to
work on both sides of the protein balance equation. However, the stimulation
of muscle protein synthesis is by far the most important half of the muscle-building
equation. This cannot be emphasized enough. Indeed, the stimulation of
muscle protein synthesis is the means by which resistance exercise makes
muscles grow (Barr and Esser, 1999); it’s also how some of the most powerful
muscle-building hormones (e.g., testosterone, growth hormone, insulin-like
growth factor-1) work their magic.
Whey vs. Casein
Now we’re prepared to discuss protein supplements. Whey and casein are the
two major proteins in milk. Whey is frequently touted as the highest quality
protein available for the bodybuilder or similarly-focused individual. Yet
these claims appear to reflect a vast misinterpretation of the available
scientific literature on the matter.
Absorption: Faster is Not Better!
When you eat a serving of whey protein, its digestion in your gut results
in a very rapid, but short-lived, surge of amino acids into your bloodstream
(Boirie et al., 1997). Casein, by comparison, yields a slower, more sustained
release of amino acids (Boirie et al., 1997). Importantly, casein’s slower
absorption profile seems to better promote a positive protein balance (Boirie
et al., 1997) –an essential requirement for building bigger muscles.
Recall from above that one way of estimating your protein balance is by measuring
your body’s balance of a particular amino acid, such as leucine. A positive
leucine balance indicates a state (i.e., increased availability of leucine
inside your muscle cells) that supports protein anabolism. Conversely, a
negative leucine balance indicates conditions favoring protein catabolism.
Ironically, whey protein marketers have been known to cite the Boirie study
(Boirie et al., 1997) as evidence with which to support whey’s ‘superiority’
as a muscle-building protein. Contrary to what their ads and articles (‘advertorials’)
imply, however, Boirie et al. found that casein –not whey— produced the most
positive leucine balance when fed to healthy young humans. In fact, whey
actually produced a negative leucine balance.
The negative leucine balance associated with eating whey protein resulted
from a greater loss of leucine, through its irreversible ‘burning’, or oxidation.
Furthermore, when the subjects in the Boirie et al. study ate whey protein,
more urea was formed than when they ate casein. Urea is a waste product of
amino acid breakdown. Nitrogen from amino acid breakdown is irreversibly
transferred to urea. Since urea cannot be reused, it represents a loss of
nitrogen.
To sum it up, at least under the conditions of this study, casein demonstrated
superior potential for promoting a positive protein balance as compared
to whey – not the other way around. But even so, will this difference
translate into faster gains in muscle size for you? Maybe. Maybe not. The
answer must be determined by long-term, controlled clinical trials.
Whey’s Frequently Touted ‘Virtue’ Is Actually Its Downfall
Again, whey is often said to be superior to casein because of its ability
to deliver amino acids into your bloodstream rapidly. Yet this is not a virtue;
rather, it’s a weakness.
When it comes to amino acid absorption, haste makes waste. The rate at which
amino acids are broken down, or catabolized, is directly related to the level
they achieve in the bloodstream (Reeds et al., 1992). The faster the amino
acids provided by the protein you eat exit your gut and enter your bloodstream,
and the higher the blood levels they attain, the more they get wasted.
The higher your blood levels of the amino acid leucine, for instance, the
greater its rate of catabolism. Eating whey protein drives blood leucine
levels very high (Boirie et al., 1997). Not surprisingly, this results in
a corresponding loss of leucine through catabolism (Boirie et al., 1997).
And as indicated above, whey generates more urea –the waste product of amino
acid breakdown— than casein.
Barnyards, Hair and Feathers
There’s another longstanding issue we need to clear up. To do so, let’s go
visit the animals in the barnyard. A barnyard filled with cows, sheep, dogs,
rats, cats, chickens.
What do all these creatures have in common? And what the heck has this got
to do with bodybuilding and whey protein supplements?
Plenty, in fact. To answer the first question, unlike you and me, all of
above barnyard creatures are covered in either hair or feathers. Hair and
feathers are made of the protein known as keratin, which is rich in the sulfur-containing
amino acid, cysteine (found in keratin in its oxidized form, cystine).
Cysteine can be produced in animals from another sulfur-containing amino
acid, methionine. Since whey has more sulfur-containing amino acids than
casein, hair- or feather-covered animals require less whey than casein to
achieve protein balance. But this advantage will clearly does not
apply to humans, a relatively hairless and featherless species, as the Boirie
et al. study would seem to agree.
Nevertheless, studies performed over a half-century ago on hair- or feather-covered
animals which demonstrated the ‘superiority’ of whey over casein, have been
used as marketing ‘support’ by companies selling whey protein supplements.
Back in 1947, Tomarelli and Bernhart demonstrated that feeding whey protein
(hydrolyzed -lactalbumin, more specifically) to rats produced greater protein
retention than did casein (e.g., Tomarelli and Bernhart, 1947). The rats
required about 70% more casein nitrogen than whey nitrogen per day to maintain
nitrogen balance. These results are consistent with a number of similar studies
performed around this time. The trouble is that these studies, too, were
performed on animals covered either in hair or feathers –rats, dogs, and
chickens, for instance. Thus, these data are applicable to barnyard animals,
but not to humans.
Methionine is an essential sulfur-containing amino acid. As I noted earlier,
it can be used by your body to synthesize cysteine (as in the production
of keratin). Rats, which were commonly used in early studies to determine
the frequently-quoted “Biological Value” (BV) of various dietary proteins,
have a methionine requirement that is around 50% greater than you or I (Sarwar
et al., 1989). This contributes to the lower BV numbers reported for dietary
proteins containing relatively less methionine when such proteins are fed
to rats, as compared to humans (Bricker and Mitchell, 1947).
Johnson et al. (1946) relate: “In the case of the human experiments, then,
it would be concluded that the methionine requirement is lower, and is not
a limiting factor in the attainment of nitrogen excretion in these experiments,
or that the requirement is met by the body protein breakdown plus any dietary
protein….Since the addition of further methionine did not reduce the nitrogen
excretion on the low protein diet, it can be concluded that no more methionine
is required under these circumstances than that represented by the entire
sulfur excretion, or 1.4 gm methionine per day for our average subject….the
present experiments suggest that the human body is not limited in its ability
to conserve nitrogen by the need to meet a methionine requirement.”
Cox et al. (1946) clarify even further: “comparison of the nitrogen retention
of a casein hydrolysate with and without added methionine in rats, dogs and
man has clearly shown a striking species difference. The addition of methionine
increased the rate of growth in rats and the magnitude of nitrogen retention
in dogs. In man, however, it was without effect on nitrogen retention…An
explanation for this difference does not seem difficult, based on the fact
that the rat and dog are covered with hair, and that man is not. Since hair
contains large amounts of cystine, it is reasonable to suppose that the requirement
for this amino acid (or methionine) is considerably greater than that of
man…The generally recognized nutritive difference between casein [lower in
cystine] and lactalbumin [higher in cystine] is valid for the rat and for
the dog, but not for man.”
CONCLUSION
As the above evidence hopefully makes clear, the claim that whey is superior
to casein for building muscle is simply not valid.
The study performed by Boirie et al. (1997) found evidence to suggest that
casein is superior to whey for promoting a positive protein balance. But
that doesn’t necessarily mean it will build muscle any better than whey,
or a chicken breast meat, for that matter.
Protein supplement ads and articles frequently cite Biological Value (BV)
numbers (e.g., 104 and sometimes even higher) for whey as evidence for its
superiority; however, these BV values were derived from studies on hair-
and feather-covered animals that require more of the sulfur-containing amino
acids that whey is rich in. These results do NOT apply to humans.








