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      Insights for Setting of Nutrient Requirements, Gleaned by Comparison of Selenium Status Biomarkers in Turkeys and Chickens versus Rats, Mice, and Lambs 1 2

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          Abstract

          To gain insights into nutrient biomarkers and setting of dietary nutrient requirements, selenium biomarker levels and requirements in response to multiple graded levels of dietary selenium were compared between day-old turkeys and chickens versus weanling rats and mice and 2-d-old lambs supplemented with sodium selenite. In rodents, there was no significant effect of dietary selenium on growth, indicating that the minimum selenium requirement was <0.007 μg Se/g diet. In contrast, there was a significant effect in turkeys, chicks, and lambs, which showed selenium requirements for growth of 0.05, 0.025, and 0.05 μg Se/g diet, respectively. Liver glutathione peroxidase (GPX) 1 activity fell in all species to <4% of selenium-adequate levels, plasma GPX3 activity fell to <3% in all species except for mice, and liver GPX4 activity fell to <10% in avians but only to ∼50% of selenium-adequate levels in rodents. Selenium-response curves for these biomarkers reached well-defined plateaus with increasing selenium supplementation in all species, collectively indicating minimum selenium requirements of 0.06–0.10 μg Se/g for rats, mice, and lambs but 0.10–0.13 μg Se/g for chicks and 0.23–0.33 μg Se/g for turkeys. In contrast, increasing dietary selenium did not result in well-defined plateaus for erythrocyte GPX1 activity and liver selenium in most species. Selenium-response curves for GPX1 mRNA for rodents and avians had well-defined plateaus and similar breakpoints. GPX4 mRNA was not significantly regulated by dietary selenium in rodents, but GPX4 mRNA in avians decreased in selenium deficiency to ∼35% of selenium-adequate plateau levels. Notably, no selenoprotein activities or mRNA were effective biomarkers for supernutritional selenium status. Robust biomarkers, such as liver GPX1 and plasma GPX3 activity for selenium, should be specific for the nutrient, fall dramatically in deficiency, and reach well-defined plateaus. Differences in biomarker-response curves may help researchers better understand nutrient metabolism and targeting of tissues in deficiency, thus to better characterize requirements.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Adv Nutr
          Adv Nutr
          advances in nutrition
          advannut
          Advances in Nutrition
          American Society for Nutrition
          2161-8313
          2156-5376
          10 November 2016
          November 2016
          1 November 2017
          : 7
          : 6
          : 1129-1138
          Affiliations
          [3 ]Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and
          [4 ]College of Veterinary Medicine, Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, China
          Author notes
          [* ]To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sunde@ 123456nutrisci.wisc.edu .
          [1]

          Supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, USDA (Hatch projects 233618 and 1004389); the Northeast Agricultural University Program for New Century Excellent Talents in University (no. NECT-1207-02) and New Century Excellent Talents In Heilongjiang Provincial University (no. 1252-NCET-009); and by the Wisconsin Alumni Foundation Selenium Nutrition Research Fund.

          [2]

          Author disclosures: RA Sunde, J-L Li, and RM Taylor, no conflicts of interest.

          Article
          PMC5105040 PMC5105040 5105040 012872
          10.3945/an.116.012872
          5105040
          28140330
          17bd7681-af73-4b7b-a2be-0fc2c672bed7
          © 2016 American Society for Nutrition
          History
          Page count
          Pages: 10
          Categories
          Reviews

          selenoprotein P,glutathione peroxidase,mRNA,recommended dietary allowances,requirement,transcripts,vitamin E

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