Thursday, December 22, 2011

Can Increasing the Amount of Fat or Carbohydrate in a Cat's Diet Compensate for Low Protein Intake?

As I discussed in a recent post on Optimal Protein Requirements for Older Cats and Cats with Hyperthyroidism, energy requirements sharply and progressively increase in older cats starting at 10 to 12 years of age (1-3). If daily caloric intake is not increased, progressive weight loss will result, due in large part to the loss of lean body mass (i.e., muscle mass), a phenomenon referred to “sarcopenia” of aging (4-7).

In addition to this increased caloric intake, older cats also require higher amounts of protein to maintain protein reserves compared with younger adult cats (3, 8-11). As cats age, they absorb and metabolize protein less efficiently (10). Therefore, it’s extremely important to feed high-quality protein (i.e., animal source rather than grain-based), as well as an adequate quantity of protein to aging cats.

Animals derive energy from the oxidation of the macronutrients carbohydrate, fat, and protein (12). Most animals, including rats and humans, generally adapt to the diet being fed and can oxidize whatever fuel mixture is contained in their prevailing diet (13,14). This enables most animals (especially omnivores) to use widely differing diet compositions to satisfy their energy requirements.

A number of veterinarians have contacted me over the last few weeks with concerns about the potential problems associated with feeding a high protein diet to the geriatric cat, especially in those cats with kidney disease. Basically, the questions come down to the following:
  • If animals can adapt their energy intake based on a wide variety of feeding regimens, why can’t we just increase the amounts of fat and carbohydrate fed to compensate for the increasing energy requirements in our senior (and hyperthyroid) cats? Won't that help prevent loss of muscle mass?
  • But can cats as obligate carnivores adapt to the same extent?
In this post, my mission is to review energy and protein metabolism in cats. I will attempt to explain why, unfortunately, increasing the amount of fat or carbohydrate fed to an older or hyperthyroid cat generally cannot compensate for a diet deficient in an optimal protein content.

Overview of the Body's Energy Production (Nutritional Biochemistry 101)

Fig. 1: Pathways of
intermediary metabolism
Let's start with a brief review of nutritional biochemistry. If you are a practicing veterinarian like myself, it's highly likely that you may not remember all of the metabolic pathways an animal uses for energy production.

The initial biochemical reactions by which energy is derived from carbohydrates, fats, and proteins are different. However, all 3 macronutrients eventually go through a final common pathway for energy generation called the citric acid cycle — also known as the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) cycle or the Krebs cycle (Figure 1) (12,15).

Carbohydrates: Glucose derived from dietary carbohydrates is first oxidized through the glycolysis pathways to yield pyruvate and then acetyl-CoA. The acetyl-CoA is then oxidized in the citric acid cycle (12,15). High-energy electrons produced in the citric acid cycle enter the electron transport chain to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which transfers its energy from chemical bonds to energy-absorbing chemical reactions within the cell (Figure 1).

Fats: Fatty acids from dietary fats are initially oxidized to acetyl-CoA by the beta-oxidation pathway, which then enter the citric acid cycle and subsequently generate ATP via oxidative phosphorylation in the electron transport system (Figure 1).

Figure 2: Protein catabolism
Protein: Once protein synthesis is maximized, excess amino acids can be used for energy by undergoing transamination and deamination. In oxidative deamination, an amino group is removed from the amino acid and converted to ammonia.

The remaining carbon skeleton from these deaminated amino acids (organic ketoacids) can be recycled to make nonessential amino acids, or they can be oxidized for energy (12,15). If used for energy, the catabolized amino acids enter either the glycolysis pathway or the citric acid cycle to ultimately form ATP in the electron transport system (Figure 1). The carbon skeletons of catabolized amino acids can also be converted to glucose or ketone bodies in the liver.

Ammonia is toxic to the body, so enzymes convert it to urea by addition of carbon dioxide in the urea cycle, which takes place in the liver. Urea can safely diffuse into the blood and then be excreted into the urine (Figure 2).

Interconversion of nutrient molecules: In metabolism, there commonly is interconversion of nutrient molecules. Excess glucose is stored as glycogen (glycogenesis); when glycogen stores are filled, glucose and amino acids are used to synthesize lipids (lipogenesis). Therefore, glycogen and adipose tissue both serve as long-term forms of energy storage in the body.

In contrast, amino acids are not "stored" in the body, other than that found in muscle and other structural proteins. Although amino acids can be converted to either fat or glucose, the opposite does not occur — fat and carbohydrates cannot be directly converted to amino acids to be made into protein (12-15).

Protein Structure, Functions & Metabolism

Proteins, from the Greek proteios meaning "first" (16), are important biological molecules that consist of string of amino acids linked together in sequence as polypeptide chains. Proteins vary in shape and size, some consisting of only 20-30 amino acids and others of several thousands (12,15).

Proteins are present in every living cell. In the skin, hair, cartilage, muscles, tendons, and ligaments, proteins hold together, protect, and provide structure to the body. As enzymes, hormones, antibodies, and globulins, they catalyze and regulate body chemistry. In addition, protein is required for growth and tissue repair, as well as for maintaining muscle mass and tone.

Essential and Nonessential Amino Acids
More than 20 amino acids are involved in the synthesis of protein in the body. Essential amino acids are those that cannot be formed in sufficient amounts to meet the requirements for growth and maintenance and must be supplied in the diet. Nonessential amino acids are those that the body can produce in sufficient amounts from other nutrients and metabolites and, thus, do not need to be supplied in the diet.

Even with the nonessential amino acids, however, fat and carbohydrates cannot be directly converted to amino acids to be made into protein (12,15). Although all mammals can synthesize 10 nonessential amino acids from precursor carbon skeletons (if adequate nitrogen and energy are available), there is no direct way that amino acids can be synthesized directly from either fat or carbohydrates.

Amino Acid Catabolism & Synthesis—Protein Turnover
Although essential amino acids are not stored as such in the body for any significant period of time, all body proteins are continuously being broken down and resynthesized in a process known as protein turnover (12,15,17). During protein turnover, some amino acids enter catabolic pathways and are permanently lost. Therefore, adequate amounts of high-quality dietary protein (containing all the essential amino acids) must be consumed each day to replace the both the essential and nonessential amino acids lost to catabolism.

Hypermetabolic states, such as hyperthyroidism or other illness, increase both protein turnover and nitrogen losses and therefore increase the daily protein requirements (18,19).

Protein as an Energy Source
Unlike fat or carbohydrate, protein cannot be stored as such in the body (other than as muscle protein itself).  In animals fed diets containing more protein than is needed, the extra protein is metabolized and used for energy (Figures 1 & 2).

In all species, but most importantly in cats (see below), ingested amino acids are converted to carbohydrates via gluconeogenesis (12,15,17, 20-22). This pathway is also used under starvation conditions to generate glucose and energy from the body's own proteins, particularly those found in muscle.

Factors That Determine How Dietary Proteins are Used
  • All or None Rule: To make a certain protein, the necessary amino acids must be present in the cell in the right amounts, or the protein will not be made. Essential amino acids that are not used to make proteins are not stored.
  • Adequacy of Caloric Intake:  If the diet fails to provide sufficient calories as carbohydrates and fats, proteins will not be synthesized; instead the ingested amino acids will be used as a source of energy.
  • Nitrogen Balance:  Normally, the amount of protein synthesis is equal to the amount of protein breakdown (12,17). If there is more protein synthesis than breakdown, then we have a positive nitrogen balance (e.g., recovery from injury). If there is greater protein breakdown than synthesis, then there is a negative nitrogen balance (e.g, starvation, illness, hyperthyroidism).
  • Hormonal Controls:  Anabolic hormones (e.g., insulin, growth hormone, sex hormones) stimulate the production or maintenance of proteins.  Catabolic hormones (e.g, glucocorticoids, thyroid hormone) stimulate the breakdown of proteins (18,19).
Cats Do Not Need Carbohydrate But Have High Protein Requirements

The cat, as a strict carnivore, has evolved to to depend on protein as a major energy source. The "natural" diet of cats in the wild is based upon the consumption of small mammals, birds, and insects — the composition of this diet is high in protein and fat but low in carbohydrate (20-22). This natural diet high in animal protein contains all of a cat's essential amino acids, which is not the case for plant-based proteins.

Cats have no dietary requirement or need for carbohydrate but are adapted physiologically and metabolically for high protein intake (23). In support of that, normal cats do well when fed diets containing 70% protein (24-27). The lack of a need for dietary carbohydrates is related to the fact that cats have developed a tremendous ability to synthesize their needed glucose from protein catabolism via hepatic gluconeogenesis (24,25,28).

Cats have a much higher protein requirement than other species, such as dogs and humans. The protein requirement for the adult cat is 2-3 times as much as the adult dog (23), and their protein requirement increases even further as cats reach old age (3,8-11). This high protein requirement of cats is primary related to the fact that cats have a limited ability to decrease the hepatic enzymes responsible for amino acid catabolism, even when fed a lower than optimal protein intake (24,29,30).

The Domestic Cat: A Metabolically Inflexible Carnivore

When most omnivores (e.g., humans, rats, pigs, dogs), ingest a diet high in protein, the activities of the amino acid-catabolizing enzymes in the liver increase to cope with the higher flux of amino acids (31-33). The activity of the urea cycle enzymes also increase to metabolize the increased ammonia generated upon the catabolism of the amino acids. On the other hand, when fed a diet low in protein, omnivores accommodate by lowering the hepatic activity of these catabolic enzymes of amino acid metabolism, as well as decreasing hepatic urea production (31-33).

By contrast, cats have a very limited ability to down-regulate these hepatic catabolic enzymes when fed a low-protein diet. In a classic study, Rogers et al (29) compared the activity of several catabolic enzymes of amino acid metabolism in adult cats fed either a high- or low-protein diet or fasted for 5 days. Results showed little changes in the hepatic enzyme activities between the 3 groups of cats, with hepatic enzyme activities remaining set at high levels to cope with a high protein diet (even when they weren’t being fed!).

Why would cats be so different?
Well, compared to other carnivores, cats may not be so strange after all. A similar degree of metabolic "inflexibility" has also been reported in other carnivores such as barn owls and the rainbow trout (34,35).

This limited metabolic flexibility in cats and other obligate carnivores likely represents an evolutionary adaptation to a consistently abundant supply of dietary protein. The moderately high and fixed activity of the urea cycle provides a safeguard against ammonia toxicity after ingestion of a high-protein meal. In addition, the high rate of amino acid catabolism allows for a readily available source of energy via direct oxidation or as a substrate for hepatic gluconeogenesis.

It is only when a cat is fed a lower protein diet, a condition that would never happen in the wild, that the high rate of protein catabolism becomes a disadvantage.

Bottom Line
  • Unlike omnivores (dogs, pigs, rats, humans), cats have a limited ability to decrease the activity of the hepatic enzymes responsible for removing amino groups from the amino acids when fed a low protein diet. 
  • Because these feline hepatic enzyme systems are constantly active, a fixed amount of dietary (or muscle) protein will always be catabolized for energy no matter how much energy in the form of carbohydrate or fat the cat ingests. 
  • In addition, neither fat nor carbohydrates can be directly converted to amino acids to be made into protein. In this regard, the carnivorous cat is similar to omnivores.
  • Overall, this explains why muscle wasting can occur so quickly in the older, geriatric cat, which becomes ill or develops a poor appetite or is fed a low-protein diet.
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