Proline: Food Sources & Daily Intake

Proline is one of the main building blocks of collagen — the structural protein that holds skin, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, bone and blood-vessel walls together — where it pairs with glycine and hydroxyproline. The body can make proline from glutamate, so it is classed as non-essential, but it becomes conditionally essential during rapid growth, wound healing and recovery, when demand runs high. To actually build collagen from proline the body needs vitamin C, which the enzyme that converts proline to hydroxyproline depends on. The richest dietary sources are collagen itself — gelatin and bone broth — followed by hard cheeses, meat, fish and eggs. The table below shows grams of proline per 100 g of food; there is no FDA Daily Value for individual amino acids, so amounts are absolute.

Proline: Food Sources & Daily Intake
RankFood (serving)Per 100 gGlucoseFructoseNotes
1Gelatin (Dry)
1 tbsp / 7 g
🟢 12 g00By far the richest source — pure collagen protein.
2Parmesan Cheese
1 oz / 28 g
🟡 4.2 gConcentrated aged-dairy protein.
3Cheddar Cheese
1 oz / 28 g
🟡 2.7 g00
4Soybeans
1 cup cooked / 172 g
🟡 2.4 gTop whole-plant source.
5Pork Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
🟡 1.6 gNutrient-dense organ meat.
6Lentils
1 cup cooked / 198 g
🟡 1.5 g
7Chicken Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
🟡 1.3 gNutrient-dense organ meat (giblets).
8Beef Meat
3 oz / 85 g
🟡 1.3 g00
9Beef Organ Meats
3 oz / 85 g
⚪ 1.2 gNutrient-dense organ meat.
10Sunflower Seeds
1 oz / 28 g
⚪ 1.2 g
11Peanuts
1 oz / 28 g
⚪ 1.1 g
12White Beans
1 cup cooked / 179 g
⚪ 1.0 g
13Chicken
3 oz / 85 g
⚪ 0.9 g00
14Pork
3 oz / 85 g
⚪ 0.9 g00
15Tuna
3 oz / 85 g
⚪ 0.8 g00
16Salmon
3 oz / 85 g
⚪ 0.7 g00
17Brown Rice
1 cup / 195 g
⚪ 0.1 g00Common staple.

Table of Contents

  1. How to Read These Tables
  2. Recommended Intakes & Upper Limits
  3. Bioavailability & Absorption
  4. Cooking & Storage
  5. Vegetarian & Vegan Sources
  6. Who Needs to Pay Attention
  7. Data Sources & References
  8. Connections
  9. Featured Videos

How to Read These Tables

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Recommended Intakes & Upper Limits

Your personal target depends on age, sex and pregnancy. The Daily Value used for the %DV column above is a single label figure; the table below is the age-specific guidance.

Reference values for this amino acid: the nine ESSENTIAL ones (the body cannot make them) must come from food, with adult requirements per WHO/FAO/UNU 2007; non-essential ones the body can synthesize itself. Proline is one of the main amino acids in collagen (with glycine and hydroxyproline), so it is central to skin, tendon, cartilage and other connective tissue, and to wound healing.
ReferenceAdult valueNotes
StatusNon-essential (conditionally essential in growth/healing)The body makes proline from glutamate, but demand can outstrip supply during rapid growth, wound healing or recovery.
Adult requirementNone setNo WHO/FAO or DRI requirement exists for proline; it is not an essential amino acid.
Main roleBuilding block of collagenProline and its hydroxylated form (hydroxyproline) make up much of collagen, the body’s main structural protein in skin, joints and connective tissue.
Richest inCollagen-rich & dairy foodsGelatin and bone broth (from connective tissue), then hard cheeses, meat, fish and eggs.

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Bioavailability & Absorption

Proline from food is well absorbed as part of dietary protein, and the body can also synthesize it from glutamate, so blood levels are rarely a problem in anyone eating enough total protein. What matters for connective tissue is having proline available together with the cofactors collagen synthesis needs — especially vitamin C, plus iron and oxygen — because the enzyme prolyl hydroxylase uses vitamin C to convert proline into the hydroxyproline that locks collagen’s triple helix together. Eating proline-rich food without enough vitamin C limits how much usable collagen the body can build.

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Cooking & Storage

Proline is stable to ordinary cooking and is not destroyed by normal heat. In fact, the most proline-dense food of all is created by cooking: simmering bones, skin and connective tissue for hours dissolves their collagen into gelatin — this is exactly what bone broth is, and why it carries so much proline and glycine. Slow, moist heat (braising, stewing, stock-making) is the way to extract collagen-bound proline from tougher cuts and bones.

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Vegetarian & Vegan Sources

Getting proline for collagen-style repair is harder on a plant-based diet, because the densest sources — gelatin and bone broth — are animal connective tissue, and plants contain no collagen at all. Plant eaters can still supply plenty of proline as an amino acid from soybeans, white and other beans, lentils, peanuts and sunflower seeds, with smaller amounts from vegetables like asparagus and cabbage. The body then builds its own collagen from that proline — provided total protein is adequate and vitamin C intake is good, since vitamin C is the limiting cofactor for collagen synthesis.

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Who Needs to Pay Attention

Outright proline deficiency is essentially unknown in people eating adequate protein, because the body manufactures its own. Proline becomes more relevant in situations of high connective-tissue demand — wound healing, recovery from surgery or burns, and rapid growth — where supply may not keep up with need. The practical priority in those settings is enough total quality protein plus sufficient vitamin C, the cofactor that lets proline be turned into collagen; proline alone, without vitamin C, cannot build sound new tissue.

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Data Sources & References

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Connections

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