Limiting Amino Acids in Pulses and Cereals

Question

The limiting amino acid in pulses is methionine, while the limiting amino acid in cereals is:

Select an answer

The limiting amino acid in pulses is methionine, while the limiting amino acid in cereals is:

  1. Glycine
  2. Arginine
  3. Tryptophan
  4. Lysine — Correct Answer
Explanation:
Correct Answer: Lysine

The limiting (most deficient) amino acids in plant proteins:

  • Pulses/Legumes → Methionine: Legumes like soybean, groundnut, chickpea are rich in lysine but deficient in methionine (a sulphur-containing amino acid).
  • Cereals/Grains → Lysine: Maize, wheat, rice, sorghum are deficient in lysine. Maize is also deficient in tryptophan.
Practical Implication — Protein Complementarity

Combining cereals + legumes provides complementary amino acid profiles — cereal's lysine deficiency is covered by legume's lysine richness, and legume's methionine deficiency is covered by cereal's methionine. This is the basis of traditional food combinations (e.g., rice + dal in India).

Maillard Reaction and Lysine

Lysine is the amino acid most susceptible to the Maillard reaction (heat damage). Heating feed causes lysine to become unavailable — this is why overheating during hay and feed processing reduces nutritive value.

📚 About this Topic — Animal Nutrition

This multiple choice question is from Animal Nutrition, Animal Refresher. It has 4 options with a detailed explanation of the correct answer. Practice more MCQs from Animal Nutrition to strengthen your preparation.

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