Is leucine the only amino acid that turns on protein synthesis?
It depends. Leucine is by far the most 'anabolic' (protein-synthesis activating) amino acid, but as with most science, the results can be nuanced.
Leucine and protein synthesis in cultured cells
Scientists first published back in 1986 that amino acids were needed to turn on protein synthesis in rat skeletal muscle.[62]
Subsequent work tested which amino acids or mixtures of them were capable of stimulating protein synthesis (mTOR activity) in cultured cells.[63] One particularly informative study examined the ability of amino acid mixtures lacking certain amino acids to activate mTOR signaling, as measured by p70 S6 kinase activation.
Both leucine and arginine were found to be essential for mTOR activation in the cultured cells, but protein synthesis was suppressed overall when cells were lacking the other remaining 18 amino acids.
Lack of leucine had the most potent effect, decreasing protein synthesis by 90%, compared to an 81% decrease when the amino acid mixture lacked arginine.
The study also revealed that neither leucine nor arginine alone were able to stimulate maximal protein synthesis, with arginine or leucine alone stimulating protein synthesis by only 7.1% or 10.8%, respectively, compared to the full complement of amino acids. Leucine and arginine in combination fared a little better, but not my much. Leucine and arginine in combination only stimulated protein synthesis to 28% of maximal levels obtained all 20 amino acids.
Both leucine and arginine alone are capable of activating protein synthesis in cultured cells, but leucine is more potent than arginine. Neither leucine alone, arginine alone, nor leucine and arginine in combination were sufficient for full-activation of protein synthesis in the absence of other amino acids.
Later research examining the effects of individual essential amino acids found that although each of the essential amino acids (EAAs; valine, leucine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, lysine, histidine, methionine, and threonine) is capable of stimulating protein synthesis in cultured cells to a certain extent, leucine was the most potent.[63][64]
Further studies in cultured cells revealed that the ability of different amino acids to turn on protein synthesis is somewhat dependent on the type of cell used, however, as leucine is the only amino acid capable turning on the protein synthesis machinery in amino acid-depleted adipocytes (fat cells).[65] Similar results were found in experiments of cultured muscle cells, with leucine alone, but not the EAA histidine alone capable of restoring protein synthesis to basal levels in amino acid-depleted cells.[66]
Although studies in cultured cells have consistently identified leucine as the most protein-synthesis stimulating amino acid, the extent to which this occurs is dependent on the cell type.
Effects of leucine on protein synthesis in animal models
Similar to cell culture studies, animal studies on leucine suggest that it is the most anabolic amino acid. Decreased protein synthesis after food deprivation in rats can be restored by leucine alone to the same extent as a complete meal.[67] Further research confirmed this result, revealing that leucine, but not the other BCAAs isoleucine or valine were capable of restoring protein synthesis in food-deprived rats.[68]
Comparing results in cultured cells and animal models leucine stands out as the most anabolic amino acid. The models differ in that leucine alone failed to rescue protein synthesis in amino acid-depleted cultured cells, but succeeded in animal models. How do we make sense of this?
The differences can be explained by the nature of protein synthesis, and differences in the experimental models. First, cellular proteins often contain most or all of the 20 total amino acids. Irrespective of the individual amino acid, if some or many from the full complement are lacking inside a cell during protein synthesis, protein synthesis will be limited. (If you want to build a bridge, you'll need all of the required bricks.) This explains why leucine alone failed to restore protein synthesis in the most of the cultured cells; in the absence of the full complement of amino acids in the growth media, the cells didn't have enough amino acids to make new proteins through synthesis.
In contrast, food or protein deprivation causes body proteins to be broken down in living animals, increasing amino acid levels in the blood. With more amino acids available, protein synthesis is activated to a greater extent in response to leucine in vivo.
Leucine, but not isoleucine or valine was capable of restoring protein synthesis to fed levels in food-deprived rats