| Literature DB >> 26101596 |
Chayanne S Ferreira1, Ricardo S Vasconcellos2, Raquel S Pedreira1, Flavio L Silva1, Fabiano C Sá1, Fernanda S A Kroll1, Ana P J Maria1, Katiani S Venturini1, Aulus C Carciofi1.
Abstract
While methods to evaluate antioxidant capacity in animals exist, one problem with the models is induction of oxidative stress. It is necessary to promote a great enough challenge to induce measurable alterations to oxidative parameters while ensuring the protocol is compatible with animal welfare. The aim of the present study was to evaluate caged transport as a viable short-term stress that would significantly affect oxidative parameters. Twenty adult Beagle dogs, maintained on the same diet for 60 d prior to the transport, were included in the study. To simulate the stress, the dogs were housed in pairs in transport cages (1·0 m × 1·0 m × 1·5 m), placed on a truck coupled to a trailer and transported for a period of 15 min. Blood collection was performed immediately before and again 3 h after the transportation to evaluate oxidative parameters in blood serum, including thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), total antioxidant capacity (TAC), sequestration activity of the radical 2,2-diphenyl-1-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH•), protein carbonylation (PC), total sulfhydryl groups (SH), alpha-tocopherol (αToc) and retinol (Ret). PC, SH and αToc were not significantly changed in the study; however, TBARS, TAC and DPPH increased, whereas Ret decreased after the transport. Although the lack of a control group of dogs not submitted to transport is a limitation to be considered, we conclude that the transport model is effective in inducing an antioxidant response in dogs and relevant blood parameters show sensitivity to this proposed model.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha-tocopherol; Antioxidants; Canine nutrition; DPPH, 2,2-diphenyl-1-picryl-hydrazyl; Lipoperoxidation; PC, protein carbonilation; ROS, reactive oxygen species; Ret, retinol; SH, total sulfhydryl groups; TAC, total antioxidant capacity; TBARS, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; Thiobarbituric acid; αToc, α-tocopherol
Year: 2014 PMID: 26101596 PMCID: PMC4473139 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2014.47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Serum oxidative parameters in dogs before and after physiological stress induction by short-term transport
| Serum concentration | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Before | After 3 h | ||
| TBARS (absorbance) | 0·040 | 0·048 | 0·003 | 0·043 |
| DPPH (% decolouration) | 5·070 | 6·195 | 0·311 | 0·006 |
| TAC (EqTROLOX) | 0·422 | 0·552 | 0·039 | 0·007 |
| PC (nmol/mg) | 17·03 | 20·63 | 2·40 | 0·280 |
| SH (μmol/l) | 48·60 | 51·44 | 1·56 | 0·150 |
| αToc (μmol/l) | 52·13 | 48·37 | 3·23 | 0·353 |
| Ret (μmol/l) | 2·30 | 1·86 | 0·153 | 0·024 |
TBARS, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; TAC, total antioxidant capacity; DPPH,2,2-diphenyl-1-picryl-hydrazyl sequestration capacity by the antioxidants present in the sample; PC, protein carbonilation; SH, total sulfhydryl groups; αToc, α-tocopherol; Ret, retinol.
*Standard error of the mean, n 20 dogs.