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Journal of Nutrition Vol. 126 No. 10 October 1996, pp. 2585-2592
Copyright © 1996 by American Society for Nutrition
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Statistical Interaction Model for Exchangeability of Food Folates in a Rat Growth Bioassay1,2,

Hans-Georg Müller, Matthew R. Facer, Nathan D. Bills*,3 and Andrew J. Clifford*,4

Division of Statistics * Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, CA 95616

The comparative value of several sources of dietary folate in promoting growth of folate-depleted rats was determined in a folate depletion-repletion rat growth bioassay. Folate-depleted rats were fed an amino acid-based diet supplemented with 11 different concentrations of folate (227, 272, 317, 363, 408, 454, 499, 544, 590, 635 and 680 nmol/kg) from each of 12 different sources of folate (folic acid, fried beef liver, cooked pinto beans individually, or as 1/3, 1/1, or 3/1 combinations of folate from the folic acid/beans, folic acid/beef liver and beans/beef liver) for a total of 132 treatments. Growth response to folic acid and bean folate was linear, whereas that to beef liver folate was distinctly nonlinear, beef liver folate being more potent at lower dietary concentrations but less potent at higher concentrations compared with folic acid and bean folate. Folic acid and bean folate were equivalent to and exchangeable with one another in promoting growth. Beef liver folate and folic acid/bean folate had an interactive effect in promoting growth. The nature of the interaction was antagonistic in that the presence of folic acid and/or bean folate reduced the efficacy of beef liver folate and vice versa. Beef liver folate is not exchangeable with either folic acid or bean folate. We conclude that food folates generally are not exchangeable and do interact adversely. A statistical interaction model that predicted the growth-promoting effect of several sources of dietary folate was developed and validated.


KEY WORDS: • folate • exchangeability • food • bioassay • statistical model • rats

1 Supported by the USDA, W-143, Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, University of California, Davis, and NIH (DK-38637).

2 The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

3 Current address: Department of Pathology and Microbiology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198.

4 To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Manuscript received 22 October 1995. Revision accepted 11 June 1996.







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