Effects of Copper and Selenium Supplementation on Performance and Lipid Metabolism in Confined Brangus Bulls

Article information

Asian-Australas J Anim Sci. 2014;27(4):488-494
1Department of Animal Science, College of Animal Science and Food Engineering, University of São Paulo, Pirassununga-SP, Brazil.
2Department of Basic Science, College of Animal Science and Food Engineering, University of São Paulo, Pirassununga-SP, Brazil.
3Department of Nutrition and Animal Production, School of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, University of São Paulo, Pirassununga-SP, Brazil.
*Corresponding Author: Arlindo Saran Netto. Tel: +55-19-35654039, Fax: +55-19-35654047, E-mail: saranetto@usp.br
College of Animal Science and Food Engineering, University of São Paulo, Pirassununga –SP, 13635-900, Brazil
Received 2013 July 05; Revised 2013 October 11; Accepted 2013 September 17.

Abstract

Twenty-eight Brangus cattle were used to determine the effect of copper and selenium supplementation on performance, feed efficiency, composition of fatty acids in Longissimus dorsi (LD) muscle, and cholesterol concentration in serum and in LD muscle and enzymes activities, reduced glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione (GSSG). The treatments were: i) Control, without copper (Cu) and selenium (Se) supplementation; ii) Se, 2 mg Se/kg of dry matter such as sodium selenite; iii) Cu, 40 mg Cu/kg of dry matter such as copper sulfate; iv) Se/Cu, 2 mg Se/kg of dry matter such as sodium selenite and 40 mg Cu/kg of dry matter such as copper sulfate. LD muscle fatty acid composition was not influenced by the treatments (p>0.05). The serum concentration of cholesterol was not influenced by the treatments (p>0.05), however, the concentration of cholesterol in LD was lower in cattle supplemented with copper and selenium (p<0.05). Oxidized glutathione and reduced glutathione increased (p<0.05) with Cu, Se and Se/Cu supplementation. The supplementation of copper (40 mg/kg DM) and selenium (2 mg/kg DM) altered the metabolism of lipids in confined Brangus cattle, through a decrease in cholesterol deposition in the LD, possibly by changing the ratio between reduced glutathione/oxidized glutathione. Copper and selenium supplementation improved animal performance and feed efficiency (p<0.05) when compared to the control group, providing advantages in the production system, while also benefiting consumers by reducing cholesterol concentration in the meat.

INTRODUCTION

Currently, much of the world population is seeking healthier food, thus producers and the feed industry are working to improve the quality of the final product. Cattle meat, which is rich in several nutrients, is frequently related to cardiovascular disease due to the high proportion of saturated fatty acids and cholesterol in the meat. Correa et al. (2012) observed that nutrition has an effect on feedlot performance and meat quality for the consumer. Boila (1987) related that in addition to the benefits for meat quality, supplementation with trace elements including copper and selenium, was responsible for weight gain by improving animal health, due to the direct effect on cellular metabolism and many enzymatic reactions.

Studies with animals and humans have shown that copper is involved with a great number of enzymatic reactions (Holben, 1999). Copper is an essential component of important metaloenzymes, such as cytochrome oxidase, superoxide dismutase, hydrolase and tyrosinase. Copper is vital during growth for defense mechanisms, iron transportation, cholesterol and glucose metabolism and brain development, among other functions (Felltman, 1991). In addition, it is necessary for the improved function of the immune system, cellular breath, bone formation, normal cardiac function, conjunctive tissue development, myelinization of spinal marrow, keratinization and pigmentation of tissues. Engle et al. (2000) showed that copper deficiency affects lipid metabolism, resulting in high levels of triglycerides, phospholipids and cholesterol in rat serum.

According to Engle and Spears (2001), copper deficiency causes an increase in plasma cholesterol. In rats, the deficiency revealed an increase in enzyme activity in the liver. Pesti and Bakalli (1996) found the addition of 125 or 250 mg of Cu per kg of dry matter reduces plasma cholesterol and cholesterol in the chest muscle in chickens. Skrivan et al. (2002) supplementing chicken with 0, 13, 35, or 126 mg of copper/kg of dry matter, with copper sulfate, noticed that there was a reduction of lipids and cholesterol in the muscle. Balevi and Coskum (2004); in an experiment carried out on hens, stated that copper supplementation reduced cholesterol concentration of in the yolk, without affecting bird performance.

Some experiments have suggested copper supplementation can affect lipid metabolism in ruminants (Engle and Spears, 2000; Engle et al., 2000a,b,c; Engle and Spears, 2001). The mechanism in which copper affects the profile of fatty acids is not clear, but it includes effects on bihydrogenation, esterification and mobilization of triglycerides. Copper has a high potential for reduction, and in rumen it can act on reduction reactions such as NADPH and NADH, interfering in the microbial biohydrogenation of unsaturated fatty acids. Copper can reduce cholesterol synthesis in the small intestine, resulting in a decrease in serum and muscular cholesterol (Engle et al., 2000a).

Engle and Spears (2004), with the objective of evaluating the effects of copper supplementation in Angus bulls on muscle lipid composition, concluded that the supplemented steers had lower reduced glutathione (GSH) and higher concentration of the oxidized form (GSSG). The decrease in intracellular GSH occurs through the protection of hepatic cells from toxic effects of free radicals, from high copper concentration. Copper entering liver cells was quickly transferred to metallothionein (Freedman cited by Engle et al., 2000b). The increased concentration of the oxidized form (GSSG) has shown an indirect relationship with enzyme HMG-CoA activity (Engle and Spers, 2001).

Selenium is a semi-metal that can exist in several oxidation conditions. McDowel (1992) discovered the selenium function in animal nutrition when the author observed that selenium supplementation avoided liver necrosis in rats. After this finding, the prevention of muscular dystrophy was reported when bovine and sheep were supplemented with selenium. In the animal organism, selenium is incorporated to several enzymes, and the most important is glutathione peroxidase. Glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and glutathione reductase enzyme action is related to glutathione reduction and oxidation (Bakalli et al., 1995).

The hypothesis is that high supplementation with copper indirectly regulates cholesterol biosynthesis by decreasing reduced form glutathione (GSH) and increasing of the oxidized form (GSSG). Selenium could also influence cholesterol metabolism, since the peroxidase glutathione enzyme (GPX) is selenium dependent and the reductase glutathione enzyme acts on the GSH/GSSG ratio. Cattle feedlot with high concentrate to increase fat deposition and thus improve meat tenderness may have also increased the concentration of cholesterol in the meat, which is not beneficial to human health.

Therefore, the aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of supplementation with copper and selenium on the diet of Brangus cattle receiving high concentrate in performance parameters, feed efficiency, glutathione activity, fatty acid profile and cholesterol concentration in meat.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Animals and diets

The experiment was performed at the College of Animal Science, University of São Paulo, Pirassununga-SP, for 131 days, 30 days for feedlot adaptation and 101 days for the experimental period. The animals utilized in this experiment were cared for by acceptable practices as summarized in the Guide for the Care and Use of Agricultural Animals Research and Teaching (FASS, 1999), and the protocol was reviewed and approved by the University of São Paulo, College of Animal Science and Food Engineering (USP/FZEA), Ethics Committee for the Use of Animals in Experiments.

Twenty-eight Brangus bulls were used, weighing 395±15 kg at the beginning of the experiment. They were individually fed a high concentrate diet (75%), and corn silage (25%) as roughage. The Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System-CNCPS was used to verify the nutritional balance of the animals. The composition of the basal diet is presented in Table 1.

Composition of the basal diet (dry matter)

The fatty acid (FA) profile in the diet was calculated in (g/100 g of FA): C18:0 3.298; C18:1 cis 9 10.835; C18:2 28.435; C18:3 1.283. The water was analyzed and it revealed the following mineral composition (mg/L): Ca 10.76; Cu 0.14; Fe<0.02; P<0.01; Mn<0.003; Total N<0.1; K 1.75; Na 2.85; Zn 0.105.

The twenty-eight bulls were divided in 4 groups, with 7 animals per treatment, and housed in individual pens. Treatments were: Treatment 1, basal diet without additional copper and selenium supplementation; Treatment 2, basal diet with 2 mg of selenium/kg of dry matter, such as sodium selenite; Treatment 3, basal diet with supplementation of 40 mg of copper/kg of dry matter, as copper sulphate; Treatment 4, basal diet with 40 mg/kg of copper supplementation, such as copper sulfate and 2 mg/kg of selenium, such as sodium selenite. During the experimental period, the animals were kept in individual pens with water available, and they were fed twice a day. The feed intake was measured daily. They were weighed at 28-day intervals, after a complete fast period of 18 h.

Sample collection

Blood samples were collected from each steer before morning feeding via jugular venipureture into heparinized vacutainer tubes on 28, 56, 84 days of experiment, then centrifuged at 1,100×g for 10 min at 4°C to obtain plasma. After 84 days of the experimental diets in confinement, the animals were slaughtered, with food restricted for 16 h, but water available, at the School Slaughterhouse of Pirassununga University Campus, according to routine procedure. Tissue samples were taken immediately after slaughter and frozen in liquid nitrogen. For determining the fatty acid profile and cholesterol, 4 samples of Longissimus dorsi (LD) muscle were collected, around 2.5 cm wide each. During the slaughter, samples of the right liver lobe were obtained from each animal and stored in liquid nitrogen for analysis of oxidized glutathione (GSSG), reduced glutathione (GSH) and glutathione peroxidase (GPX).

Analytical procedures

The determination of dry matter, mineral matter, crude protein, ether extract, acid detergent fiber of the diets followed AOAC (1996, Methods 930.15; 942.05; 988.05; 954.02; 973.18) recommendations. Selenium was determined using the fluorimetric method as described by Olson et al. (1975) and copper levels using atomic absorption spectrophotometry (Perkin Elmer equipment).

The cholesterol analyses in muscle were performed using the enzymatic method according to Saldanha et al. (2004). The composition of fatty acids in LD muscle was performed using high resolution gas chromatography with the ThermoFinnigan chromatograph, model Trace with a flame ionization detector (FID) using a fused silica capillary column 100 m long, 0.25 mm in diameter and 0.2 mm thick. The carrier gas was helium with a flow rate set at 1.2 mL/min. One mL of sample was injected in split mode with a split ratio of 1/21 at a temperature of 250°C. Oven temperature was programmed to start at 70°C and remained so for 4 min, raised to 170°C at 13°C/min and finally to 250°C at 35°C/min for 5 min. The detector temperature was 300°C and the gas flow was 450, 40 and 45 mL/min for synthetic air, hydrogen and nitrogen (makeup), respectively, according to the methodology described by Perez et al. (2002).

Sodium phosphate buffer (10 mmol/L, pH 7.4) was used to extract the glutathione peroxidase (GPX) in liver. The liver samples were ground in a high speed potter homogenizer for 2 min at a ratio of one gram to 10 mL of cold extraction buffer (4°C). After homogenization, samples were centrifuged at 8,000 rpm for 10 min under refrigeration. The supernatant was removed carefully with a Paster pipette, transferred to a tube on ice and used to determine maximum enzyme activity.

Maximum glutathione peroxidase (GPX) activity was determined using the spectrophotometric method based on a decline in the concentration of NADPH at 340 nm. To determine the GSH/GSSG ratio, samples of liver homogenate were precipitated in sulphosalicylic acid 5%. Total glutathione was measured using the spectrophotometric method of recycling in the presence of nitrobenzoic acid, NADPH and reductase glutathione, to 412 nm. GSSG was determined by direct derivation of GSH, by homogenizing another sample of the same tissue in the presence of 12.5 nM N-ethylmaleimide, followed by alkaline hydrolysis.

The statistical design was completely randomized, with 7 replications per treatment (pen as experimental unit). The data were analyzed using SAS (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, 2004), with contrasts, by PROC GLM. Serum cholesterol was analyzed using PROC MIXED. A 5% significance level was adopted for all analyzed data.

RESULTS AND DISCUSION

Daily gain and feed efficiency

There was a significant difference in mineral supplementation in feed efficiency and daily weight gain (Table 2).

Feed intake (kg DM), feed efficiency (weight gain/dry matter intake), average daily weight gain and standard deviations of cattle receiving the control diet, supplemented with selenium, copper or selenium/copper

Cheng et al. (2008) reported no effect with 10 or 20 mg Cu/kg DM in lambs, in the parameters of weight gain and feed efficiency. A similar result was found by Engle and Spears (2000a) working with steers and supplementing 10 or 40 mg Cu/kg DM. However, as in our study, Zhang et al. (2007) verified the effect on weight gain and feed efficiency when adding 10 mg Cu/kg DM in the basal diet containing 7.38 mg Cu/kg DM in Inner Mongolian White Cashmere goats.

Lawler et al. (2004) supplemented steers with different sources of selenium at doses above the recommended by the NRC and reported no change in weight gain or feed efficiency. Engle and Spers (2000) reported that copper supplementation increased feed efficiency of cattle during the finishing period, compared to control treatment, the same results were obtained in this experiment. Copper and selenium play important roles in many enzymatic reactions and improve the immune response. We believe that these positive effects on animal metabolism may have contributed to better feed efficiency and animal performance.

The reason for the improved performance found in animals supplemented with selenium, copper and selenium/ copper in our study can be attributed to the intake of these minerals below the dosage recommended by NRC (2000) in the control treatment, since a negative control group was used without the inclusion of any of the minerals tested in this study. The basal diet used in the control treatment contained about 60% of the amount recommended by the NRC (2000), selenium and copper. Even though there were no clinical signs of copper and selenium deficiency in the control group, animals had an inferior performance when compared to supplemented animals during the experimental period, showing the importance of supplementation with those two minerals.

Composition of fatty acids in muscle

There was no significant difference in the proportion of saturated and unsaturated acids with copper, selenium and selenium/copper supplementation (Table 3). The results showed that copper, selenium and selenium/copper supplementation did not alter the profile of fatty acids in the meat or in its composition of saturated or unsaturated fatty acids. A lower proportion of linoleic and palmitic acid with the selenium/copper treatment in relation to the control was observed (p<0.05).

Profile of fatty acids in Longissimus dorsi muscle of cattle receiving control diet, selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), copper (40 mg/kg of DM) and selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM)

The composition of fatty acids in meat is the result of lipogenesis in adipose tissue and dietary lipids and subsequent ruminal biohydrogenation (Berchielli et al., 2006). Some authors found changes in the composition of fatty acids, reduction in saturated fatty acids and increase in unsaturated fatty acids with copper supplementation in the levels of the present study. Engle et al. (1999, 2000a) and Engle and Spears (2000) found an increase in C18:2 and C18:3 with supplementation of physiological levels of copper. The explanation of these authors was based on a depletion of ruminal biohydrogenation promoted by copper and consequently an increase in intestinal absorption of unsaturated fatty acids. Engle et al. (2000b) explained that the high reduction potential of copper in the rumen can reduce equivalents of reduction in the form of NADPH and NADH, interfering in microbial biohydrogenation of unsaturated fatty acids.

In the present study, there was no change in the fatty acid profile with copper or selenium supplementation. Thus, there was no influence of copper on ruminal biohydrogenation. Engle at al. (2000c) studied the effect of copper supplementation and soybean oil on ruminal biohydrogenation and found an interaction between copper supplementation and soybean oil. The authors found a reduction in ruminal biohydrogenation only when copper was offered and an increase of biohydrogenation when copper and soybean oil were supplied together.

Soybeans were the source of lipids used in this study, present in extruded soybean. This may have been the reason why no effects were found in the fatty acid composition with copper, selenium and selenium/copper supplementation, since copper supplementation reduces biohydrogenation but supplementation combined with soybean oil seems to inhibit this effect.

The decrease in linoleic and palmitic acid with the selenium/copper treatment in relation to the control cannot be explained biologically and it was not observed in any work in the literature. This inconsistency may be partially explained by the difference in Cu levels or sources, diet fed and duration of supplementation.

Blood and liver measurement

Copper, selenium or selenium and copper supplementation had no effect on serum cholesterol on days 28, 56, or 84 after the start of the experimental period (p>0.05, Table 4). For muscular cholesterol, treatments with 40 mg/kg of copper and 2 mg/kg of selenium supplemented separately, showed lower muscular cholesterol concentration than the control treatment (p<0.05). However, there was no effect of the combined supplementation of these two minerals when compared to the control group (p>0.05, Figure 1).

Concentration of cholesterol and standard deviations in mg/dL, in cattle blood on the 0, 28th, 56th, 84th day receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM)

Figure 1

Concentration of cholesterol and standard deviations in mg per 100 grams of meat, in the Longissimus dorsi muscle of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Engle et al. (2000a) found no effect of copper supplementation on serum cholesterol levels up to the 56th day, however, these levels decreased on the 96th day. Thus, it is possible that the levels of total serum cholesterol had decreased after the 84th day of their study, since after 101 days of supplementation all animals were slaughtered and a lower deposition of cholesterol in the LD muscle was observed in copper and selenium treatments compared to the control. This would explain the results obtained in our study, showing the non-influence of copper, selenium and selenium/copper supplementation in serum cholesterol, in the period and levels studied.

Furthermore, total cholesterol is largely composed by LDL, which has a long half-life. In other words, the effect of synthesis reduction could have occurred before the 84th day, but was not evidenced because of the long half-life of LDL. Some authors have shown a relationship between copper supplementation and the cholesterol metabolism in different animals. As in the present study, some authors found a decrease in deposition of cholesterol in LD with copper supplementation in ruminants, including Engle and Spears (2000), Engle et al. (2000a, c), and in non-ruminants such as described by Konjufca et al. (1997), Pesti and Bakalli (1996), Armstrong et al. (2001).

Kim et al. (1992) showed that copper deficiency causes hypercholesteromy because of the increase in hepatic GSH with an increase in HMG-CoA reductase activity, which is the main enzyme that regulates the synthesis of cholesterol. Figure 2, 3, and 4 show GSH and GSSG concentration and the relationship between GSH/GSSG in cattle livers in different treatments.

Figure 2

GSH and standard deviations, in μmol per gram of liver, of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Figure 3

GSSG and standard deviations, in μmol per gram of liver, of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Figure 4

Relation between GSH and GSSG and standard deviations, in μmol per gram of liver, of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

The selenium/copper treatment had lower concentrations of GSH, when compared with isolated selenium and copper treatments (p<0.05), however, selenium, copper and selenium/copper treatments did not differ from the control treatment. For GSSG, the selenium, copper and selenium/copper treatments showed higher values than the control (p<0.05). Therefore, the most accepted hypothesis is that the high concentration of copper in the liver indirectly regulates the biosynthesis of cholesterol by decreasing the reduced form of glutathione (GSH) and increasing the oxidized form (GSSG). The increase in the oxidized concentration (GSSG) found in this study for the selenium, copper and selenium/copper treatments, reduces the activity of the HMG-CoA enzyme (Gilbert cited by Engle and Spears, 2001). According to Armstrong et al. (2001) HMG-CoA reductase requires “thiols” as GSH for its activity and disulfides such as GSSG, which decreases the activity of this enzyme.

The literature shows no studies relating selenium supplementation and synthesis, or deposition of cholesterol in animals of any zootechnical interest, however, the change in glutathione metabolism justifies the results obtained. In the selenium/copper treatment, a decrease in deposition of cholesterol in the LD muscle was not observed. This result may have occurred due to an interaction between these two micro minerals, and a possible increase in the biosynthesis of glutathione by increasing selenium.

CONCLUSIONS

The results confirmed the hypothesis proposed that copper or selenium supplementation altered lipid metabolism on confined Brangus cattle. There was an increase in the concentration of the oxidized form (GSSG), for the selenium, copper and selenium/copper treatments. Selenium supplementation had an effect on the GSH/GSSG relationship.

Copper and selenium are essential for improving animal performance and feed efficiency in confined Brangus bulls.

References

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Article information Continued

Figure 1

Concentration of cholesterol and standard deviations in mg per 100 grams of meat, in the Longissimus dorsi muscle of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Figure 2

GSH and standard deviations, in μmol per gram of liver, of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Figure 3

GSSG and standard deviations, in μmol per gram of liver, of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Figure 4

Relation between GSH and GSSG and standard deviations, in μmol per gram of liver, of cattle receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

Table 1

Composition of the basal diet (dry matter)

Ingredients and nutrients (g/100 g)
 Corn silage 25.000
 Ground corn 64.200
 Extruded soybean 7.875
 Urea 0.967
 Sodium bicarbonate 0.300
 Salt 0.285
 Limestone 0.600
 Rumensin 0.022
 Mineral* 0.750
Nutrients by analysis
 Crude protein (%) 12.90
 Ether extract (%) 4.21
 NDF (%) 18.34
 ADF (%) 16.05
 Coppera (mg/kg) 5.80
 Seleniumb (mg/kg) 0.06
*

Ca 115 g/kg; P 65 g/kg; S 30 g/kg; Mg 11g/kg; Na 188 g/kg; Co 80 mg/kg; Cu 1,200 mg/kg; I 83 mg/kg; Mn 1,400 mg/kg; Se 20 mg/kg; Zn 400 mg/kg.

a,b

Analyzed values copper and selenium in treatments: T2 = Copper 5.88 mg/kg and selenium 2.09 mg/kg DM; T3 = Copper 46.01 mg/kg and selenium 0.05 mg/kg DM; T4 = Copper 45.93 mg/kg and selenium 2.01 mg/kg DM.

Table 2

Feed intake (kg DM), feed efficiency (weight gain/dry matter intake), average daily weight gain and standard deviations of cattle receiving the control diet, supplemented with selenium, copper or selenium/copper

Treatments Contrasts


C Se Cu Se/Cu A B C D E F
Feed intake (kg) 10.91b±2.32 11.27 a±1.98 11.05a±2.54 11.78 a±1.88 0.03 0.04 0.02 0.10 0.11 0.92
Feed efficiency 0.09c±0.01 0.12a±0.01 0.11ab±0.01 0.10b±0.01 <0.01 0.03 0.05 0.10 0.05 0.78
Daily weight gain (kg) 0.98b±0.24 1.35a±0.14 1.21ab±0.17 1.18ab±0.24 0.01 0.06 0.09 0.26 0.17 0.84

C = Control diet (without supplementation of copper and selenium); Se = Suplementation of selenium (2 mg/kg of DM).

Cu = Suplementation of copper (40 mg/kg of DM); Se/Cu = Suplementation of selenium (2 mg/kg of DM) and copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

A = Control X Se; B = Control X Cu; C = Control X Se/Cu; D = Se X Cu; E = Se X Se/Cu; F = Cu X Se/Cu.

Means followed by different letters in rows differ (p<0.05).

Table 3

Profile of fatty acids in Longissimus dorsi muscle of cattle receiving control diet, selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), copper (40 mg/kg of DM) and selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM)

Item Treatments Contrasts


Controla Seleniumb Copperc Se/Cud Ae Bf Cg Dh Ei Fj
———g/100 g de FA———
Lauric 10.48±3.04 13.47±4.59 13.64±5.35 12.61±5.41 0.25 0.23 0.41 0.94 0.75 0.70
EPAk 0.16±0.43 0.25±0.63 0.31±0.77 0.58±0.69 0.79 0.67 0.24 0.87 0.38 0.46
Linolenic 7.39±6.36 7.71±7.07 6.79±3.55 8.32±5.68 0.92 0.85 0.77 0.65 0.85 0.65
DHAl 1.23±1.25 0.87±1.44 0.66±0.87 0.85±2.10 0.66 0.49 0.64 0.80 0.90 0.81
Miristic 1.69±0.72 1.42±0.48 1.39±0.68 1.38±0.70 0.47 0.43 0.39 0.94 0.89 0.88
Palmitoleic 6.68±1.38 6.25±1.51 6.10±1.45 6.53±2.37 0.66 0.55 0.88 0.87 0.75 0.66
Linoleic 10.31a±3.35 8.58ab±2.10 8.48ab±2.59 6.80b±1.97 0.24 0.22 0.02 0.95 0.25 0.27
Palmitic 8.83a±2.61 6.74ab±1.93 7.00ab±2.88 6.05b±2.41 0.14 0.20 0.05 0.85 0.64 0.51
Oleic 34.47±3.14 32.75±2.20 36.56±7.96 37.30±3.40 0.51 0.43 0.29 0.17 0.10 0.78
Estearic 18.71±7.88 21.94±6.20 19.02±5.37 19.54±5.25 0.92 0.37 0.81 0.43 0.52 0.88
Saturated 39.72±7.88 43.57±6.03 41.07±7.46 39.59±9.09 0.37 0.75 0.97 0.58 0.38 0.97
Unsaturated 60.27±7.88 56.42±6.03 58.92±7.46 60.41±9.09 0.37 0.75 0.97 0.58 0.38 0.97
a

Control diet (without supplementation of copper and selenium).

b

Suplementation of selenium (2 mg/kg of DM).

c

Suplementation of copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

d

Suplementation of selenium (2 mg/kg of DM) and copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

e

Control X Se.

f

Control X Cu.

g

Control X Se/Cu.

h

Se X Cu.

i

Se X Se/Cu.

j

Cu X Se/Cu.

k

Eicosapentaenoic acid.

l

Docosahexaenoic acid.

Means followed by different letters in rows differ (p<0.05).

Table 4

Concentration of cholesterol and standard deviations in mg/dL, in cattle blood on the 0, 28th, 56th, 84th day receiving control diet (without supplementation of selenium and copper), copper (40 mg/kg of DM), selenium (2 mg/kg of DM), or selenium (2 mg/kg of DM)/copper (40 mg/kg of DM)

Treatments Cholesterol concentration (mg/dL) in blood at different times

0 28th day 56th day 84th day
Controla 103.07±11.9 117.53±10.1 122.29±9.5 126.88±9.6
Copper (Cu)b 101.86±10.4 107.08±8.4 122.38±13.5 107.07±5.3
Selenium (Se)c 112.68±5.9 97.88±8.7 127.55±14.7 110.11±9.8
Se/Cud 106.96±13.6 103.5±5.8 121.34±10.1 113.65±7.9
a

Control diet (without supplementation of copper and selenium).

b

Suplementation of selenium (2 mg/kg of DM).

c

Suplementation of copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

d

Suplementation of selenium (2 mg/kg of DM) and copper (40 mg/kg of DM).

There was no effect of the supplementation of copper, selenium or selenium and copper in serum cholesterol (p>0.05).