AUTHOR=Zaromskyte Gabriele , Prokopidis Konstantinos , Ioannidis Theofilos , Tipton Kevin D. , Witard Oliver C. TITLE=Evaluating the Leucine Trigger Hypothesis to Explain the Post-prandial Regulation of Muscle Protein Synthesis in Young and Older Adults: A Systematic Review JOURNAL=Frontiers in Nutrition VOLUME=Volume 8 - 2021 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/nutrition/articles/10.3389/fnut.2021.685165 DOI=10.3389/fnut.2021.685165 ISSN=2296-861X ABSTRACT=The ‘leucine trigger’ hypothesis was conceived to explain the postprandial regulation of muscle protein synthesis (MPS). This hypothesis implicates the magnitude of postprandial increase in blood leucine concentrations for regulation of the magnitude of MPS response to an ingested protein source. Recent evidence from experimental studies has challenged this theory, with reports of a disconnect between blood leucine concentration profiles and postprandial rates of MPS following protein ingestion. This systematic review aimed to qualitatively evaluate the leucine trigger hypothesis to explain the postprandial regulation of MPS in response to ingested protein at rest and post-exercise in young and older adults. We hypothesised that experimental support for the leucine trigger hypothesis will depend on age, exercise status (rest vs. post-exercise) and protein type (i.e. isolated proteins vs. protein-rich whole food sources). This qualitative systematic review extracted data from studies that combined measurements of blood leucine concentrations and rates of MPS following ingested protein at rest and following exercise in young and older adults. Data relating to blood leucine concentration profiles and postprandial MPS rates were extracted from all studies, and reported as providing sufficient or insufficient evidence for the leucine trigger hypothesis. Overall, 16 of the 29 eligible studies provided sufficient evidence to support the leucine trigger hypothesis for explaining divergent postprandial rates of MPS in response to different ingested protein sources. Of these 16 studies, 13 were conducted in older adults (8 of which conducted measurements post-exercise) and 14 studies included the administration of isolated proteins. This systematic review underscores the merits of the leucine trigger hypothesis for the explanation of the regulation of MPS. However, our data indicate that the leucine trigger hypothesis confers most application in regulating the postprandial response of MPS to ingested proteins in older adults. Consistent with our hypothesis, we provide data to support the idea that the leucine trigger hypothesis is more relevant within the context of ingesting isolated protein sources rather than protein-rich whole foods. Future mechanistic studies are warranted to understand the complex series of modulatory factors beyond blood leucine concentration profiles within a food matrix that regulate postprandial rates of MPS.