San Diego Union-Tribune

5 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PROTEIN

- BY GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

Protein is the macronutri­ent of the moment. On TikTok, videos with the hashtag #protein have been viewed more than 9.1 billion times, with influencer­s swearing the nutrient builds strong, bulging physiques, trims away body fat and supercharg­es metabolism­s.

The nearly ubiquitous social media message is, whoever we are, we need more protein.

But the hype doesn’t match reality. Most of us are probably getting enough protein, although highly active people may need a little more.

“The devil is in the details,” said Stuart Phillips, a professor of kinesiolog­y at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, and an expert on protein, physical activity and health. Here are the five things you really need to know about protein.

1 Active people need more protein than couch potatoes:

If you’re sedentary, you officially need about 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight, according to the recommende­d daily allowance set by the government’s Food and Nutrition Board. This translates to somewhere between 45 to 60 grams of daily protein for most people who rarely exercise — or approximat­ely two chicken breasts (about 30 grams of protein each) or a 6-ounce can of tuna (about 40 grams) and a quarter-cup of almonds (about 8 grams).

But this amount is almost certainly too low for many of us. The recommenda­tion “for protein might be enough to keep us alive, but it is too low for physically active people,” said Eric Rawson, a professor of nutrition and exercise at Messiah University in Mechanicsb­urg, Pa.

Most of us are probably getting enough protein, although highly active people may need a little more.

For active people, a better recommenda­tion would be “1 to 1.2 grams per kilogram” of body weight each day, Phillips said, or higher, “up to a level of 1.6 grams per kilogram” of body weight daily if you’re physically active. In simple terms, if you weigh 160 pounds, or

72.5 kilograms, then 1 gram per kilogram of your weight is 72.5 grams of daily protein, which you could get by eating, over the course of your day, a 6-ounce steak (about 42 grams), a cup of Greek yogurt (about 17 grams) and a half-cup of tofu (about 20 grams).

Some researcher­s advocate for more, though, especially for athletes in the middle of heavy training, when their muscles are under constant strain. For them, the “optimal” amount of protein may be as high as 2.2 grams per kilogram of body weight every day or approximat­ely a gram of protein for every pound of body weight, said Shawn Arent, the chairman of the department of exercise science at the University of South Carolina and a longtime sports nutrition researcher.

2 You can overdo the protein thing:

Our muscles can only take in and use so much of this stuff.

“I don’t see data to suggest that our bodies can use protein beyond about 0.4 to 0.5 grams of protein per kilogram” of body weight at a single meal, Phillips said, which, for most of us, would equate to a large chicken breast.

Swallow more protein than that and the excess is stored as fat, used as metabolic fuel or transforme­d into urea, which is protein stripped of its nitrogen and excreted through the kidneys.

Extra-large portions of protein, in other words, produce expensive pee.

Thankfully, they won’t damage your kidneys, unless you already have kidney disease. That widespread belief is a myth, Phillips said.

But perhaps the most important thing to know about protein is that you’re probably getting enough.

“Most Americans are eating close to 1.0 to 1.2 grams per kilogram of their body weight” in protein most days, said Nicholas Burd, the director of the Nutrition and Exercise Performanc­e Research Group at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, which seems to be close to the nutritiona­l sweet spot for most of us, assuming we’re active but not Olympians. 3

Still concerned about getting enough protein? Supplement­s, like shakes and bars “are convenient,” Phillips said. But so is a hard-boiled egg, which contains about 6 grams of protein, or a chicken breast. “I eat a lot of Greek yogurt and chicken,” he said.

There’s little evidence that certain proteins are more nutritious than others, although some people swear by whey powder. Derived from milk, whey is a good source of leucine, an amino acid that helps jump-start muscle building. “But so is Greek-style yogurt,” Phillips said, or salmon, which is packed with leucine.

“Whey protein has falsely been put on a pedestal as superior due to aggressive sports marketing campaigns,” Burd said.

Most people, including athletes, can get sufficient protein without needing powdered whey, even if they don’t eat meat.

You don’t need that whey shake:

“Vegetarian and vegan athletes can easily meet protein needs on a plantbased diet,” said Enette Larson-Meyer, the director of the Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism Laboratory at Virginia Tech and coauthor of “Plant-Based Sports Nutrition: Expert Fueling Strategies for Training, Recovery, and Performanc­e.”

Plant proteins may not be complete, she said, meaning they don’t contain all the amino acids we need, but “consuming a combinatio­n of different plant-based protein sources, such as beans and grain, will provide a balanced protein profile.” If your diet is plant-forward, but not fully vegetarian, add an egg or some cheese to improve a mostly vegetarian dish’s “amino-acid profile,” she said.

4 Extra protein probably won’t help you lose weight:

Because protein fills you up, it helps you eat less, and your body has to work harder to break it down. As a result, you expend more calories digesting protein compared with carbs or fatty foods.

But the actual amount of

that extra calorie burn “is tiny,” Phillips said, and unlikely to have a meaningful effect on body weight.

In effect, despite many social media claims to the contrary, mainlining protein won’t incinerate body fat. To drop pounds, you must consume fewer calories, from any nutrients, than you burn.

But protein does play a role in keeping you healthy during weight loss, Arent said. It helps your body hang onto muscle tissue while you shed fat.

“Muscle is your health currency,” he said. “Don’t lose it!”

5

“I’m an advocate of spreading protein throughout the day, especially making sure you consume enough at breakfast,” Burd said.

Protein is the most satiating of macronutri­ents, he pointed out, taking longer to digest than carbohydra­tes or fat, its fellow macronutri­ents, and leaving you feeling fuller. So, having protein at every meal helps control appetite and ensures a steady supply of amino acids for working muscles.

“Protein is a good foundation to each feeding,” Arent said.

Some people advocate eating protein after a workout and right before bed.

Protein after a hard workout, for instance, in conjunctio­n with carbohydra­tes, might replenish lost fuel stores and speed recovery better than carbohydra­tes alone, Arent said, although that idea is controvers­ial. “But the reality is that there is no upside to not having protein after a workout,” Arent said.

Likewise, a small portion of pre-bedtime protein, such as yogurt or a handful of nuts, has been shown in some studies to amplify muscle building overnight. “Nighttime protein ingestion is an excellent opportunit­y to increase muscle protein synthesis,” Rawson said, but the process “doesn’t have to be complicate­d.” If you have dinner at 6 p.m., “add a Greek yogurt at 9 p.m.,” he said.

Protein after a workout and before bed may have benefits:

Having protein at every meal helps control appetite and ensures a steady supply of amino acids for working muscles.

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