If building muscle were simply a matter of lifting weights, the process would be straightforward. Train hard, eat well, repeat โ and growth would follow.
But as with most things worth pursuing, the reality is more nuanced.
Muscle growth is not determined solely by what happens in the gym. It is governed by a biological process that occurs after you put the weights down โ a process known as muscle protein synthesis (MPS).
Understand this process properly, and your training becomes more than effort. It becomes strategy.
What Is Muscle Protein Synthesis?
Muscle protein synthesis is the process by which the body repairs and builds muscle tissue.
When you train โ particularly through resistance training โ you create small amounts of damage to muscle fibres. This is not harmful in the long term; it is necessary. In response, the body initiates repair, using amino acids (the building blocks of protein) to rebuild the muscle fibres stronger and, in many cases, larger than before.
This rebuilding process is MPS.
However, there is an important distinction to make:
- Muscle Protein Synthesis (building)
- Muscle Protein Breakdown (degradation)
Muscle growth โ or hypertrophy โ only occurs when MPS exceeds muscle protein breakdown over time (Phillips et al., 2014).
This is the fundamental principle behind every effective muscle-building programme.
The Role of Resistance Training
Resistance training is the primary stimulus for increasing muscle protein synthesis.
When you lift weights, particularly with sufficient intensity and volume, you create mechanical tension within the muscle. This tension acts as a signal, triggering a cascade of molecular events that lead to increased MPS.
Research consistently shows that:
- Training with moderate to heavy loads
- Performing sufficient volume (sets and reps)
- Training close to muscular fatigue
โฆall significantly increase muscle protein synthesis rates (Schoenfeld, 2010).
Importantly, this response is temporary.
MPS typically rises for 24โ48 hours following a training session, depending on your training experience (Burd et al., 2011). This is why consistent, repeated training sessions are required โ one session alone is not enough.
Protein Intake: The Foundation of Growth
You cannot build muscle without raw materials.
Protein provides the amino acids required for muscle repair and growth. Without adequate protein intake, the body simply cannot sustain elevated levels of muscle protein synthesis.
How Much Protein Do You Need?
Current evidence suggests:
- 1.6โ2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day
This range appears to maximise muscle protein synthesis for most individuals engaged in resistance training (Morton et al., 2018).
For example:
- A 75kg individual โ 120gโ165g of protein per day
Consistency matters more than extremes. Excessive protein intake does not equate to faster muscle growth โ it simply provides diminishing returns.
Protein Quality and Amino Acids
Not all proteins are created equal.
High-quality protein sources contain all essential amino acids, particularly leucine, which plays a key role in initiating muscle protein synthesis.
Sources rich in leucine include:
- Lean meats
- Eggs
- Dairy products
- Whey protein
Plant-based diets can still support muscle growth, but they often require more careful planning to ensure adequate amino acid intake.
Leucine acts almost like a โtriggerโ for MPS โ without enough of it, the process is less effective (Norton & Layman, 2006).
Protein Timing: Does It Matter?
Protein timing has been heavily debated, but the evidence suggests a balanced perspective.
What Matters Most:
- Total daily protein intake
- Even distribution across meals
Consuming protein in 3โ5 meals per day, each containing around 20โ40g of high-quality protein, appears to optimise MPS throughout the day (Areta et al., 2013).
Post-Workout Nutrition
While the so-called โanabolic windowโ is not as narrow as once believed, consuming protein within a few hours after training is still beneficial โ particularly if you have not eaten beforehand.
The goal is simple: ensure your body has the nutrients it needs when MPS is elevated.
Training Frequency and Muscle Protein Synthesis
Since MPS is a temporary response, training frequency becomes important.
If you only train a muscle group once per week, you are stimulating MPS infrequently. By increasing training frequency, you increase the number of times MPS is elevated.
This is why many modern programmes favour:
- Training each muscle group 2โ3 times per week
This approach aligns more closely with the biology of muscle growth, providing repeated stimulation without excessive fatigue (Schoenfeld et al., 2016).
The Role of Progressive Overload
Muscle protein synthesis does not remain elevated indefinitely from the same stimulus.
The body adapts.
To continue driving growth, you must applyย progressive overloadย โ gradually increasing the demands placed on the muscle.
This can be achieved by:
- Increasing weight
- Increasing reps
- Increasing total volume
- Improving execution and control
Without progressive overload, MPS responses diminish over time, and progress stalls.
The principle is simple: the body only adapts when it is challenged beyond its current capacity.
Energy Balance: Fuel for Growth
Muscle protein synthesis is an energy-demanding process.
While it is possible to build muscle in a calorie deficit (particularly for beginners), optimal conditions for growth typically require a caloric surplus.
This provides the body with sufficient energy to:
- Support training performance
- Sustain elevated MPS
- Minimise excessive muscle breakdown
A modest surplus โ rather than an aggressive one โ is generally more effective for lean muscle gain.
Sleep and Recovery: The Overlooked Factors
Training and nutrition often dominate the conversation, but recovery is where growth actually occurs.
Sleep plays a critical role in:
- Hormonal regulation (including testosterone and growth hormone)
- Muscle repair processes
- Overall recovery
Sleep deprivation has been shown to reduce muscle protein synthesis and increase muscle breakdown (Dattilo et al., 2011).
Aim for:
- 7โ9 hours of quality sleep per night
Without it, even the best training and nutrition plan will fall short.
Age and Muscle Protein Synthesis
As we age, the body becomes less responsive to protein intake โ a phenomenon known as anabolic resistance.
This means:
- Higher protein intake may be required
- Resistance training becomes even more important
The principle, however, remains unchanged: stimulate the muscle, provide the nutrients, allow recovery.
Muscle can be built at any age โ but the margin for error becomes smaller.
Common Mistakes That Limit Muscle Growth
Even with an understanding of MPS, progress can stall if key principles are ignored.
1. Inadequate Protein Intake
Without sufficient protein, MPS cannot be sustained.
2. Poor Training Intensity
Training too far from failure reduces the stimulus for growth.
3. Lack of Progressive Overload
Repeating the same workouts without progression limits adaptation.
4. Inconsistent Nutrition
Muscle growth is a long-term process โ inconsistency undermines it.
5. Neglecting Recovery
Overtraining without adequate rest reduces MPS and increases breakdown.
Bringing It All Together
Muscle protein synthesis is not a single event โ it is a continuous process influenced by your training, nutrition, and recovery.
To maximise muscle growth:
- Train with purpose and sufficient intensity
- Apply progressive overload consistently
- Consume adequate, high-quality protein
- Distribute protein intake across the day
- Maintain a supportive calorie intake
- Prioritise sleep and recovery
Do this consistently, and you create an environment where MPS exceeds muscle breakdown โ the condition required for growth.
Muscle growth is often portrayed as a simple equation. In reality, it is a controlled biological process โ one that rewards precision over guesswork.
Understanding muscle protein synthesis shifts your mindset.
You stop chasing random workouts and start building a system.
You stop relying on motivation and start relying on structure.
Because ultimately, muscle is not built in a single session. It is built in the hours and days that follow โ through processes you cannot see, but can absolutely influence.
Train accordingly.
References
- Phillips, S.M. et al. (2014). A brief review of critical processes in exercise-induced muscular hypertrophy. Sports Medicine.
- Schoenfeld, B.J. (2010). The mechanisms of muscle hypertrophy and their application to resistance training.Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.
- Burd, N.A. et al. (2011). Exercise training and protein metabolism. Journal of Applied Physiology.
- Morton, R.W. et al. (2018). Protein intake to maximise muscle mass. British Journal of Sports Medicine.
- Norton, L.E., & Layman, D.K. (2006). Leucine regulates translation initiation of protein synthesis. Journal of Nutrition.
- Areta, J.L. et al. (2013). Timing and distribution of protein ingestion during prolonged recovery. Journal of Physiology.
- Schoenfeld, B.J. et al. (2016). Effects of resistance training frequency on muscle hypertrophy. Sports Medicine.
- Dattilo, M. et al. (2011). Sleep and muscle recovery. Medical Hypotheses.





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