Abstract
We determined the effects of increased dietary concentrations of molybdenum
and sulfur on the accumulation and tissue concentrations of cadmium in sheep,
and compared them with effects on copper. Forty sheep, each weighing
approximately 40 kg, were adjusted for 3 weeks to a basal diet of 80%
wheaten chaff and 20% lupin seed containing (per kg dry weight)
0·016 mg Cd, 0·45 mg Mo, 3·4 mg Cu, and 1·9 g S.
On Day 0 of treatment, 8 sheep were killed and the tissues analysed for trace
minerals to provide a baseline value. The remaining sheep were divided into 4
dietary treatment groups: control (basal diet plus 4 mg Cd/kg), +Mo
(control diet plus 15 mg Mo/kg), +S (control diet plus 4 g S/kg),
+Mo+S (control diet+15 mg Mo+4 g S/kg).
The treatment period lasted 80 days, after which sheep were killed for tissue
samples. Sulfur alone reduced the accumulation of Cd in liver, kidney, and
muscle by 60% compared with control sheep (P <
0·05). Molybdenum alone reduced Cd accumulation by 40% in liver
and muscle (P < 0·05) and 30% in kidney
(P = 0·09). When provided together
(+Mo+S), the effect was equivalent to feeding with Mo alone, showing
that Mo blocked the effect of S. Cadmium concentrations in whole kidneys for
the 4 respective treatments were 6·40 ± 0· 7, 2·8
± 0·3, 4·5 ± 0·8, and 5·0 ±
0·5 mg/kg fresh weight. The pre-treatment concentration was
0·7 ± 0·2 mg/kg.
For Cu in blood and tissues, the effects of Mo and S treatment were consistent
with the thiomolybdate hypothesis, and were quite different from those seen
for Cd. Copper concentrations in whole kidney for the 4 treatments were
4·1 ± 0·1, 3·5 ± 0·2, 4·7
± 0·3, and 22·4 ± 3·9 mg/kg fresh
weight. The pre-treatment concentration was 4·1 ± 0·3
mg/kg. The results show that increased dietary levels of Mo and S reduce
the accumulation of Cd in tissues, and the mechanisms of action differ from
those involving Cu.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
25 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献