Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T04:54:59.291Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Methylmalonic acid in the diagnosis of cobalt deficiency in barley-fed lambs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2007

F.P.M. O'Harte
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture, Veterinary Research Laboratories, Stoney Road, Stormont, Belfast BT4 3SD
D. G. Kennedy
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture, Veterinary Research Laboratories, Stoney Road, Stormont, Belfast BT4 3SD
W. J. Blanchflower
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture, Veterinary Research Laboratories, Stoney Road, Stormont, Belfast BT4 3SD
D. A. Rice
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture, Veterinary Research Laboratories, Stoney Road, Stormont, Belfast BT4 3SD
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Eight lambs were fed on a cobalt-deficient whole-barley diet supplemented with urea, vitamins and minerals. Four control lambs were fed on the same diet which had been further supplemented with Co. Plasma vitamin B12 levels in the Co-depleted group declined rapidly, falling below the normal range within 5 weeks. Differences between the live weights of the animals in the two groups approached statistical significance by week 14. However, methylmalonic acid (MMA) rose above normal levels in the Co-depleted group within 7 weeks. This suggested that an elevated plasma concentration of MMA is a comparatively early indicator of functional vitamin B12 deficiency. It is recommended that 10 μmol/l be the upper level of normality for plasma MMA concentration in barley-fed animals, in contrast with the level of 5 μmol/l for grass-fed animals. Changes in the plasma concentrations of MMA and ethylmalonic acid associated with feeding the barley-based diet per se did not significantly affect the validity of the gas-liquid chromatographic assay for MMA.

Type
Minerals: Absorption and Metabolism
Copyright
Copyright © The Nutrition Society 1989

References

REFERENCES

Andrews, E.D. (1965). Observations on the thrift of young sheep on a marginally cobalt-deficient area. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 8, 788817.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bremner, I., Humphries, W.R., Morrice, P.C. & Carlyle, W.W.H. (1988). Control of selenium and cobalt deficiencies in lambs by supplementation with oral anthelmintics. Veterinary Record 123, 217218.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Field, A.C., Suttle, N.F., Brebner, J. & Gunn, G.W. (1988). An assessment of the efficacy and safety of selenium and cobalt included in an anthelmintic for sheep. Veterinary Record 123, 97100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gawthorne, J.M. (1968). The excretion of methylmalonic and formiminoglutamic acids during the induction and remission of vitamin B12 deficiency in sheep. Australian Journal of Biological Sciences 21, 789794.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gawthorne, J.M. (1970). The effect of cobalt intake on the cobamide and cobinamide composition of the rumen contents and blood plasma of sheep. Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science 48, 285292.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Helmer, L.G. & Bartley, E.E. (1971). Progress in the utilization of urea as a protein replacer for ruminants. A review. Journal of Dairy Science 54, 2551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kovachy, R.J., Copley, S.D. & Allen, R.H. (1983). Recognition, isolation, and characterization of rat liver D- methylmalonyl coenzyme A hydrolase. Journal of Biological Chemistry 258, 1141511421.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lough, A.K. & Calder, A.G. (1976). Urinary excretion of methylmalonic and ethylmalonic acids by sheep fed on a barley-rich diet. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society 35, 90A91A.Google ScholarPubMed
McMurray, C.H., Blanchflower, W.J., Rice, D.A. & McLoughlin, M. (1986). Sensitive and specific gas chromatographic method for the determination of methylmalonic acid in the plasma and urine of ruminants. Journal of Chromatography 378, 201207.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McMurray, C.H., Rice, D.A., McLoughlin, M. & Blanchflower, W.J. (1985). Cobalt deficiency and the potential of using methylmalonic acid as a diagnostic and prognostic indicator. In Trace Element Metabolism in Man and Animals, vol. 5, pp. 603609 [Mills, C.F., Bremner, I. and Chesters, J.K., editors]. Slough: Commonwealth Agricultural Bureaux.Google Scholar
Mann, S.O., Wilson, A.B., Barr, M., Lawson, W.J., Duncan, L., Smith, A., Fell, B.F., Walker, H.F. & Macdonald, D.C. (1983). Thiaminase activity in the gut of cobalt-deficient sheep. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 34, 211218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marston, H.R., Allen, S.H. & Smith, R.M. (1961). Primary metabolic defect supervening on vitamin B12 deficiency in sheep. Nature 190, 10861091.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mills, C.F. (1981). Cobalt deficiency and cobalt requirements of ruminants. In Recent Advances in Animal Nutrition, pp. 129141 [Haresign, W., editor]. London: Butterworths.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Harte, F.P., Blanchflower, W.J. & Rice, D.A. (1989). Methylmalonic acid as an indicator of vitamin B12 deficiency in lambs fed on a cereal-based diet. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society 48, 142A.Google Scholar
Ørskov, E.R. & Grubb, D.A. (1977). The use of whole barley diets fortified with solutions of urea, minerals and vitamins for lambs. Animal Feed Science and Technology 2, 307314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ørskov, E.R., Smart, R. & Mehrez, A.Z. (1974). A method for including urea in whole grains. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 83, 299303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rice, D.A., McLoughlin, M., Blanchflower, W.J., Goodall, E.A. & McMurray, C.H. (1987). Methylmalonic acid as an indicator of vitamin B12 deficiency in grazing sheep. Veterinary Record 121, 472473.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rice, D.A., McLoughlin, M., Blanchflower, W.J., McMurray, C.H. & Goodall, E.A. (1989). Biological Trace Element Research (In the Press).Google Scholar
Smith, R.M., Osborne-White, W.S. & Russell, G.R. (1967). Metabolism of propionate by sheep liver; pathway of propionate metabolism in aged homogenate and mitochondria. Biochemical Journal 104, 441449.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sutherland, R.J. (1980). On the application of serum vitamin B12 radioassay to the diagnosis of cobalt deficiency in sheep. New Zealand Veterinary Journal 28, 169170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suttle, N.F. (1986). Problems in the diagnosis and anticipation of trace element deficiencies in grazing livestock. Veterinary Record 119, 148152.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Underwood, E.J. (1981). Cobalt and nickel. In The Mineral Nutrition of Livestock, pp. 113123 [Underwood, E.J., editor]. Slough: Commonwealth Agricultural Bureaux.Google Scholar