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Dive into the research topics where Robert W. Peace is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert W. Peace.


Plant Foods for Human Nutrition | 1989

Digestibility of protein and amino acids in selected foods as determined by a rat balance method

G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting; Danielle Brulé

Values (%) for true digestibility of crude protein and individual amino acids in 20 selected foods were determined by the rat balance (fecal) method. The products were fed as the sole source of protein in diets containing 8% crude protein (N × 6.25). Lowest true protein digestibility values (79–84) were obtained for pinto beans, kidney beans and lentils; intermediate values (89–92) were obtained for chick peas, beef stew, skim milk (over heated), rolled oats, whole wheat cereal, and pea protein concentrate; and highest values (94–100) were obtained for sausage, macaroni-cheese, rice-wheat gluten cereal, skim milk, tuna, soy isolate, peanut butter, chicken frankfurters, beef salami, casein and casein + methionine. In animal foods, peanut butter and soy isolate, the differences between true digestibility of crude protein and most individual amino acids were less than 5%. However, the values for true digestibility of methionine and cystine were up to 44% lower than those of crude protein in pinto beans, kidney beans, lentils, chick peas and pea concentrate. In these legumes, digestibility of crude protein was not a good predictor of digestibility of the limiting amino acids.


Plant Foods for Human Nutrition | 1989

Relationship between dietary fiber levels and protein digestibility in selected foods as determined in rats

Roger Mongeau; G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; René Brassard

Samples of 15 food products and feces obtained by feeding them to rats were analysed for dietary fiber fractions. The food products were added as the sole source of protein in 8% protein diets, making up 8.8–51.6% of the diets. Diets were supplemented with 0.54–5.00% purified cellulose to make them more comparable in total fiber. Fiber analyses of food products revealed that the protein sources provided 0.06–7.27% total dietary fiber. The true protein digestibility in rats was negatively correlated with the total food fiber level (r=−0.69,P<0.01) or with the food cellulose level (r=−0.82,P<0.01) but it was positively correlated (r=+0.81,P<0.01) with the purified cellulose level. No relationship was found between protein digestibility and fiber fermentability. Results indicate that several food fiber fractions and possibly associated substances influenced protein digestibility. Purified cellulose did not have the same physiological behavior as food cellulose from the viewpoint of protein digestibility and fiber fermentability.


Plant Foods for Human Nutrition | 1989

Relationship between amino acid scores and protein quality indices based on rat growth

G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting; Danielle Brulé

Protein efficiency ratio (PER), relative PER (RPER), net protein ratio (NPR) and relative NPR (RNPR) values, and amino acid scores were calculated for 20 food products (casein, casein + Met, beef salami, skim milk, tuna, chicken frankfurters, sausage, heated skim milk, peanut butter, rolled oats, soy isolate, chick peas, pea concentrate, kidney beans, wheat cereal, pinto bean, lentils, rice-wheat gluten cereal, macaroni-cheese, and beef stew). In most cases, PER, RPER, NPR or RNPR ranked the products in the same order and positive correlations among the protein quality methods were highly significant (r=0.98−0.99). Amino acid scores (based on the first limiting amino acid, Lys-Met-Cys, Lys-Met-Cys-Trp or lys-Met-Cys-Trp-Thr) were positively correlated to the PER, RPER, NPR or RNPR data (r=0.61−0.75). Inclusion of the correction for true digestibility of protein improved the correlations between amino acid scores and the indices based on rat growth. The correlations were especially high between Lys-Met-Cys scores (corrected for true digestibility of protein) and PER, RPER, NPR or RNPR (r=0.86−0.91). Inclusion of the correction for true digestibility of individual amino acids did not result in further improvements of the correlations in most cases. It is concluded that adjusting amino acid scores for true digestibility of protein would be sufficient and further correction for digestibility of amino acids would be unnecessary in mixed diets.


Plant Foods for Human Nutrition | 1993

Effect of amino acid supplementation on protein quality of soy-based infant formulas fed to rats

G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting

The powder forms of soy-based infant formulas obtained from four manufacturers were fed to weanling rats for two weeks, as the sole source of protein in diets containing 8% protein, 20% fat, and adequate amounts of minerals and vitamins. The relative protein efficiency ratio (RPER) and the relative net protein ratio (RNPR) values (casein + methionine=100) of diets containing unsupplemented formulas were 71–81 and 78–85, respectively. Supplementation of the formula diets with lysine (0.2%), methionine (0.2%), threonine (0.1%) or tryptophan (0.05%) increased the level of the supplemental amino acid in rat serum but generally failed to improve the RPER or RNPR values. Addition of all four essential amino acids to the formula diets, however, caused a marked improvement in their protein quality (RPER or RNPR values=100). The data suggested that proteins in soy-based formulas could be marginally co-limiting in several indispensable amino acids.


Amino Acids | 1995

Influence of high dietary threonine on growth and amino acids in blood and tissues of rats.

G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting

SummaryDiets containing 8 or 15% protein from casein plus limiting amino acids, 25% fat and adequate levels of other nutrients for rat growth were supplemented with 0, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 or 4% of excess L-threonine. Addition of up to 1% excess threonine had little effect on weight gains or food intakes of weanling rats, but addition of 2 and 4% threonine caused a drastic reduction in weight gains or food intakes (up to 41%); the adverse effect being more severe in rats fed lower protein diets. Addition of graded levels of excess threonine resulted in (5 to 47-fold and 4 to 20-fold) increase in concentration of free threonine in rat plasma and brain, respectively. Addition of excess threonine also caused up to 5-fold increase in plasma level of 3-methylhistidine, suggesting increased muscle protein breakdown.


Plant Foods for Human Nutrition | 1992

Influence of dietary soybean trypsin inhibitors and DL-ethionine on sulfur amino acid adequacy of diets for young rats

Robert W. Peace; G. Sarwar; Herbert G. Botting; S.P. Touchburn

Weanling male Wistar rats were fed 20% protein diets based on casein or either of two combinations of soy protein isolate and ground raw soy providing three levels of soybean trypsin inhibitors (SBTI; 0,448 and 808 mg of trypsin inhibited per 100g of diet respectively). DL-ethionine was included at three levels (0,0.05% and 0.10%) with each level of SBTI. After 4, 8 and 12 weeks ofad libitum feeding, diets containing SBTI without DL-ethionine were associated with decreases in weight gain, feed efficiency, serum cholesterol and serum urea nitrogen. Higher levels of triglycerides, glutamate pyruvate transaminase (SGPT) and altered serum free amino acid levels were also found. Increased dietary levels of DL-ethionine also resulted in deficits in growth and feed efficiency, decreased serum cholesterol, increased SGPT and similar alterations in serum free amino acids. Combination of dietary SBTI with DL-ethionine resulted in even greater growth deficits and serum cholesterol decreases as well as increases in SGPT and serum triglycerides and changes in serum free amino acid levels. Methionine deficiency in the young rats fed SBTI and DL-ethionine was indicated by the changes in serum amino acids and growth deficits. Moderation of some effects over the 12 week test period suggested decreased methionine requirements in the older rats.


Nutrition Research | 1988

Bioavailability of lysine in milk-based infant formulas as determined by rat growth response method

Ghulam Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting

Abstract Bioavailability of lysine in smaples of different forms (powder, liquid concentrates, ready-to-use, premature and/or hypoallergenic) of infant formulas (involving varying degrees of heat processing during preparation, and containing different proportions of casein and whey proteins) obtained from four manufacturers was determined by the rat growth response method using regression analysis (weight gain vs. lysine consumed). A wheat gluten basal diet adequate in all nutrients for rat growth except lysine (0.26%) was supplemented with graded levels of crystalline lysine (0.08, 0.16, 0.24, 0.32, 0.40, 0.48 and 0.64%, standard diets), or infant formulas providing 0.16% supplemental lysine (test diets). These diets were fed to weanling Sprague-Dawley rats for a period of 3 weeks. Bioavailability of lysine was determined after 1 and 3 weeks of test. Values for bioavailability of lysine in the infant formulas after 1 and 3 weeks of test were 78–95 and 84–97%, respectively. Diets containing liquid concentrate form of infant formulas had the lowest lysine bioavailability values. It is suggested that protein quality of liquid concentrates may be lower than that of powder and/or other forms of infant formulas prepared by the same manufacturer.


Nutrition Research | 1991

Dietary cysteine/methionine ratios and taurine supplementation: effects on rat growth, amino acids and bile acids

G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting

Abstract Diets containing 15% protein (casein plus arginine, threonine and tryptophan), 20% fat (soybean-coconut oil) and adequate amounts of minerals and vitamins were supplemented with methionine and/or cysteine to provide cysteine/methionine ratios of 0.2, 1.0 and 2.0 simulating those in various dietary proteins, human milk and infant formulas. The dietary cysteine/methionine ratios had significant (P


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1989

Differences in protein digestibility and quality of liquid concentrate and powder forms of milk-based infant formulas fed to rats.

G. Sarwar; Robert W. Peace; Herbert G. Botting


Journal of Food Science | 1988

Effects of Storage on Protein Nutritional Quality of Grain Legumes

Robert W. Peace; Murray O. Keith; G. Sarwar; Herbert G. Botting

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G. Sarwar

Health and Welfare Canada

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Danielle Brulé

Health and Welfare Canada

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Murray O. Keith

Health and Welfare Canada

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René Brassard

Health and Welfare Canada

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Roger Mongeau

Health and Welfare Canada

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