Copper absorption from human milk, cow's milk, and infant formulas using a suckling rat model
1985
Lonnerdal, B. | Bell, J.G. | Keen, C.L.
Extract: Since copper deficiency is known to occur during infancy, it becomes important to assess copper uptake from various infant diets. We have investigated the uptake of copper from human milk, cow's milk, cow's milk formulas, cereal/milk formula and soy formula, compensating for the decay of 64-Cu and using the suckling rat as a model. Radiocopper was added to the diet in trace amounts. Ultracentrifugation, ultrafiltration, and gel filtration were used to show the added 64-Cu bound to milk fractions and individual binding compounds in a manner analogous to the distribution of native copper, thus validating the use of extrinsically labeled diets. Labeled diets were intubated into a 14-day-old suckling rats. Animals were killed after 6 h and tissues removed and counted. Liver copper intake was 25% from human milk, 23% from cow's milk formula, 18% from cow's milk, 17% from premature (cow's milk based) infant formula, 17% from cereal/milk formula and 10% from soy formula. These results show that the rat pup model may provide a rapid inexpensive, and sensitive method to assay bioavailability of copper from infant foods. (author)
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