Abstract
Abstract
The activity of liver microsomal UDP-glucuronyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.17), an enzyme known to detoxify phenolic compounds, was measured in chicks and rats fed high- (HTS) and low-tannin sorghums (LTS). In an initial investigation, activity was significantly elevated in chicks fed HTS-soybean meal diets over those fed the LTS control diet. Other studies were designed to differentiate between the effects due to tannin and those resulting from a protein deficiency which had previously been reported to increase the activity of this enzyme. In general, only a relatively small part of the increased activity observed by feeding HTS to chicks could be attributed to a tannin-induced protein deficiency. The same phenomenon of elevated activity produced by feeding HTS to chicks was not observed in the rat. These results would suggest that sorghum tannins, or their breakdown products, are absorbed and activating UDP-glucuronyltransferase in the chick, but not the rat.
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