| Literature DB >> 28442410 |
Qing-Qing Yang1, Xiao-Yun He2, Hong-Yu Wu3, Chang-Quan Zhang4, Shi-Ying Zou2, Tian-Qi Lang2, Samuel Sai-Ming Sun5, Qiao-Quan Liu6.
Abstract
Lysine is considered to be the first essential amino acid in rice. An elite High-Free-Lysine transgenic line HFL1 was previously produced by metabolic engineering to regulate lysine metabolism. In this study, a 90-day toxicology experiment was undertaken to investigate the potential health effect of feeding different doses of HFL1 rice to Sprague-Dawley rats. During the trial, body weight gain, food consumption and food efficiency were recorded, and no adverse effect was observed in rats fed transgenic (T) rice diets compared with non-transgenic (N) or control diets. At both midterm and final assessments, hematological parameters and serum chemistry were measured, and organ weights and histopathology were examined at the end of the trial. There was no diet-related difference in most hematological or serum chemistry parameters or organ weights between rats fed the T diets and those fed the N or control diets. Some parameters were found to differ between T groups and their corresponding N and/or control groups, but no adverse histological effect was observed. Taken together, the data from the current trial demonstrates that high lysine transgenic rice led to no adverse effect in Sprague-Dawley rats given a diet containing up to 70% HFL1 rice in 90 days.Entities:
Keywords: Feeding study; High free lysine; Rat; Toxicology; Transgenic rice
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28442410 DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2017.04.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem Toxicol ISSN: 0278-6915 Impact factor: 6.023