| Literature DB >> 27833936 |
Alice S Green1, Andrea J Fascetti1.
Abstract
Vitamin A is essential for life in all vertebrate animals. Vitamin A requirement can be met from dietary preformed vitamin A or provitamin A carotenoids, the most important of which is β-carotene. The metabolism of β-carotene, including its intestinal absorption, accumulation in tissues, and conversion to vitamin A, varies widely across animal species and determines the role that β-carotene plays in meeting vitamin A requirement. This review begins with a brief discussion of vitamin A, with an emphasis on species differences in metabolism. A more detailed discussion of β-carotene follows, with a focus on factors impacting bioavailability and its conversion to vitamin A. Finally, the literature on how animals utilize β-carotene is reviewed individually for several species and classes of animals. We conclude that β-carotene conversion to vitamin A is variable and dependent on a number of factors, which are important to consider in the formulation and assessment of diets. Omnivores and herbivores are more efficient at converting β-carotene to vitamin A than carnivores. Absorption and accumulation of β-carotene in tissues vary with species and are poorly understood. More comparative and mechanistic studies are required in this area to improve the understanding of β-carotene metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27833936 PMCID: PMC5090096 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7393620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1Simplified schematic of the major metabolic pathways of β-carotene and retinoids. BCO-1, β,β-carotene 15,15′-oxygenase; BCO-2, β,β-carotene 9,10′-oxygenase.
Estimated vitamin A requirements and safe upper limits in RE1/kg dry matter in animal species. Requirements listed are the minimum requirements or adequate intake values.
| Species | Physiological state | Requirement | Upper limit | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cat | Growth | 1000 | 80,000 | [ |
| Maintenance | 1000 | 100,000 | ||
| Gestation and lactation | 2000 | 100,000 | ||
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| Catfish | All | 450 | 9999 | [ |
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| Chicken | Growth | 450 | 4500 | [ |
| Laying | 900 | 13500 | ||
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| Cockatiel | Maintenance | 600 | <3000 | [ |
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| Common carp | All | 1200 | ND | [ |
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| Cow, beef | Feedlot | 660 | 19800 | [ |
| Pregnant heifers and cows | 840 | 19800 | ||
| Lactating cows and bulls | 1170 | 19800 | ||
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| Cow, dairy | Growth | 1014 | 19800 | [ |
| Lactating cows and bulls | 840 | 19800 | ||
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| Dog | Growth, gestation, lactation | 1212 | 15,000 | [ |
| Maintenance | 1212 | 64,000 | ||
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| Fox | Growth | 732 | ND | [ |
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| Geese | Growth | 450 | 4500 | [ |
| Breeding | 1200 | 4500 | ||
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| Goat | Maintenance | 1500 | 13500 | [ |
| Lactation | 1750 | |||
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| Hamster | All | 1223 | ND | [ |
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| Horse | Maintenance | 549 | 4800 | [ |
| Growth, working | 450–690 | 4800 | ||
| Pregnancy and lactation | 825–1110 | 4800 | ||
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| Human | Adult male | 1200 | 6000 | [ |
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| Mink | Growing | 1779 | ND | [ |
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| Mouse | All | 800 | ND | [ |
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| Pig | Growing, 5–10 kg | 660 | 6000 | [ |
| Growing, 20–120 kg | 390 | 6000 | ||
| Pregnant swine and boars | 1200 | 12000 | ||
| Lactating | 600 | 12000 | ||
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| Rabbit | Growing, maintenance | 174 | 4800 | [ |
| Gestation | 497 | 4800 | ||
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| Rainbow trout | All | 750 | 7500 | [ |
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| Salmon | All | 750 | 7500 | [ |
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| Sheep | Replacement ewes, 60 kg | 470 | 13500 | [ |
| Pregnancy, 70 kg | 992 | 13500 | ||
| Lactation, 70 kg | 714 | 13500 | ||
| Replacement rams, 80–100 kg | 593 | 13500 | ||
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| Turkey | Growing and breeding | 1500 | 4500 | [ |
11 retinol equivalent (RE) = 1 μg retinol.
Estimated efficiency of conversion of β-carotene to vitamin A in animals, defined as μg of β-carotene required to form 1 RE (1 μg retinol). The n value given is the total number of animals in the study.
| Species | Conversion ratio | Study design | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Herbivorous mammals | |||
| Cow | 8.33 | Recommendation extrapolated from study in lambs [ | [ |
| Sheep | 5.56–8.33 | Recommendation based on review of available studies. | [ |
| Sheep | 7.36 | Depletion/repletion study of BC from corn silage in lambs ( | [ |
| Horse | 6–10 | Recommendation based on review of available studies. | [ |
| Horse | >10 | Depletion/repletion study with BC supplement in water-soluble beadlet form; serum retinol and relative dose response test used to indicate VA status ( | [ |
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| Omnivorous mammals | |||
| Rat | 2 | Recommendation based on review of available studies. | [ |
| 6 | Depletion/repletion study using dry gelatin beadlet form of BC as supplement; hepatic VA used to indicate VA status. | [ | |
| Mongolian gerbil | 6–13 | Depletion/repletion study using water-soluble beadlet form of BC as supplement ( | [ |
| Human | 2 in oil | Recommendation based on review of available studies. | [ |
| Human | 2.4 | Stable isotope study administering physiological doses of 13C-BC in oil to children for ≤10 wk ( | [ |
| Human | 9.1 | Stable isotope study administering single oral doses of 2H-BC to adults ( | [ |
| Human | 14.8 in carrots; | Subjects consumed single meal of intrinsically labeled 2H-spinach and 2H-carrots ( | [ |
| Pig | 6.7 | Recommendation based on review of available studies. | [ |
| Pig | 13–27 | Depletion/repletion study of BC from corn ( | [ |
| Pig | 40 | Gilts were fed low VA diet for only 4 weeks, and there was no indication that they were truly depleted ( | [ |
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| Carnivorous mammals | |||
| Ferret | >15 | Depletion/repletion study with BC supplement from water-soluble beadlets ( | [ |
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| Birds | |||
| Chicken | 2 | Recommendation based on review of available studies. | [ |
| Chicken | 6 | Depletion/repletion study using dry gelatin beadlet form of BC as supplement; hepatic VA used to indicate VA status. | [ |
| Cockatiel | >2 | Depletion/repletion study in which chicks born from breeding pairs fed VA-devoid diet consumed VA or BC (synthetic) supplemented diets for 38 d ( | [ |
Summary of β-carotene metabolism in animal species.
| Species | Absorption of intact BC into blood | Accumulation of BC in tissues | Conversion to retinol | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Herbivorous mammals | ||||
| Cows | Yes | Yes, but varies with breed | Yes | [ |
| Sheep and goats | Yes, but only with high dose | No | Yes | [ |
| Other Artiodactyla | No | No (shown in white-tailed deer) | Assumed | [ |
| Rabbits | n/a | No | Yes | [ |
| Horses | Yes | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| Omnivorous mammals | ||||
| Rat | No | No | Yes | [ |
| Mongolian gerbil | Yes | Yes | Yes | [ |
| Humans | Yes | Yes | Yes | [ |
| Nonhuman primates | Yes | Yes | Yes | [ |
| Pigs | Yes, but only with high dose | Yes, but only with high doses | Yes | [ |
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| Carnivorous mammals | ||||
| Ferrets | Yes | Yes | Yes (but inefficient) | [ |
| Canids | Yes, but only with high dose | No | Yes | [ |
| Felids | Yes, but only with high dose. Wild felids may absorb BC more efficiently than domestic cats | No | Yes (but inefficient) | [ |
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| Birds | No, xanthophylls absorbed preferentially | No | Yes (shown in chickens, cockatiels, canaries, quail, and ducks | [ |
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| Fish | No, xanthophylls absorbed preferentially | No | Yes | [ |