| Literature DB >> 26653675 |
Dale M Perez1, Mark P Richards1, Robert S Parker2, Mark E Berres1, Aaron T Wright3, Mamduh Sifri4, Natalie C Sadler3, Nantawat Tatiyaborworntham1, Na Li1.
Abstract
Turkeys and chickens reared to 5 weeks of age and fed diets with feedstuffs low in endogenous tocopherols were examined. Treatments included feed supplemented with RRR (natural source vitamin E) alpha tocopheryl acetate (AcT, 35 mg/kg feed) and all-racemic (synthetic vitamin E) AcT (10 and 58 mg/kg feed). Alpha tocopherol hydroxylase activity was greater in liver microsomes prepared from turkeys compared to that from chickens (p < 0.01). Alpha and gamma tocopherol metabolites were higher in turkey bile than in chicken when assessing the RRR AcT diet and the all-racemic AcT diet at 58 mg/kg feed (p < 0.01). Turkey cytochrome P450 2C29 was increased relative to its chicken ortholog on the basis of RNA-Seq transcript abundance (p < 0.001) and activity-based protein profiling (p < 0.01) of liver tissue. Alpha tocopherol concentrations in plasma, liver, and muscle from turkey were lower than the respective tissues from chicken (p < 0.05). Lipid oxidation was greater in turkey thigh than in chicken (p < 0.05). These results suggest that elevated tocopherol metabolism by cytochrome P450 hydroxylase(s) in turkeys contributes to the decreased accumulation of alpha tocopherol in turkey tissues compared to that of chickens.Entities:
Keywords: lipid oxidation; metabolites; poultry; rancidity; vitamin E
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26653675 PMCID: PMC4753779 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b05433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279