Journal Article10.1093/JN/106.1.77
Metabolic changes in golden hamsters fed vitamin B-12-deficient diets.
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TL;DR: Various metabolic changes were observed in male hamsters fed vitamin B-12-deficient diets with or without supplements of cobalt, methionine, and a previously untested cobalt-free pseudovitamin B-Twin, resulting in a marked increase in the urinary excretion and higher tissue levels of glutathione.
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Abstract: Various metabolic changes were observed in male hamsters fed vitamin B-12-deficient diets with or without supplements of cobalt, methionine, and a previously untested cobalt-free pseudovitamin B-12. The effects observed after 31 weeks of consuming the vitamin B-12-deficient diets included a marked increase in the urinary excretion of both methylmalonic acid and formiminoglutamic acid, slight increases in red blood cell mean corpuscular volume, and higher tissue levels of glutathione and activities of glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Vitamin B-12 in the diet prevented these changes, as did inorganic cobalt. The cobalt-free pseudovitamin B-12 showed no vitamin B-12 activity, neither did it have any potent antagonistic effect. Methionine supplementation reversed some of the metabolic changes. Addition of inorganic cobalt to the diet resulted in a significant increase in tissue stores of vitamin B-12.
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Citations
Effects of removal of the forestomach and caecum on the utilization of dietary urea in golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) given two different diets.
TL;DR: The results suggest that the caecum may play a more important role in food utilization than the forestomach in growing male golden hamsters given a low-or high-fibre diet, however, the Forestomach of the golden hamster plays a significant role in the utilization of dietary urea.
•Journal Article
Interaction of nutrition and infection: effect of vitamin B12 deficiency on resistance to Trypanosoma lewisi.
K.G. Thomaskutty,C.M. Lee +1 more
TL;DR: A metabolic imbalance technique was employed to study vitamin B(12) deficiency in rats infected with Trypanosoma lewisi, and severe depression in the primary and secondary antibody responses (IgG and IgM) to in vivo immunization of sheep erythrocytes was observed in the deficient animals.
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Harry S. Jacob,James H. Jandl +1 more
TL;DR: The results substantiate the existence in human red cells of the glutathione peroxidase mechanism proposed by Mills, whereby GSH protects cellular constituents such as hemoglobin from oxidative damage induced by H2O2.
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A method for the determination of formiminoglutamic acid in urine.
Herbert Tabor,Lillian Wyngarden +1 more
TL;DR: A sensitive spectrophotometric method is presented for the assay of formimino-Lglutamic acid in the urine based on enzymatic reactions which have recently been demonstrated to be involved in the metabolism offormiminoglutamic Acid.