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Food Science and Human Nutrition Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-0370
2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jfgy{at}ufl.edu.
To investigate the effects of pregnancy on folate metabolism, we
conducted an 84-d study in second-trimester (gestational wk 1425)
pregnant women (n = 6) and nonpregnant controls
(n = 6) with stable-isotopic tracer methods.
All subjects were fed a diet containing
272 nmol/d (120
µg/d) folate from food, along with supplemental folic
acid that contained 15% [3',5'-2H2] folic
acid ([2H2]folic acid) during d 141 and
that was unlabeled during d 4284 to yield a constant total folate
intake of 1.02 or 1.93 µmol/d (450 or 850
µg/d). Isotopic enrichment of plasma folate, urinary
folate and the urinary folate catabolites
para-aminobenzoylglutamate (pABG) and
para-acetamidobenzoylglutamate (ApABG) was determined at
intervals throughout the study. The labeling of pABG and ApABG
reflected that of tissue folate pools from which the catabolites
originate. After the intake of labeled folic acid was terminated on d
41, labeling of urinary folate exhibited a biphasic exponential decline
with distinct fast and slow components. In contrast, during d 4284,
the enrichment of urinary pABG and ApABG exhibited primarily monophasic
exponential decline, and plasma folate underwent little decline of
labeling during this period. Pregnant women and controls did not differ
in estimates of body folate pool size and most aspects of the excretion
of labeled urinary folate and catabolites, rates of decline of
excretion, and areas under the curves for folate and catabolite
excretion. Pregnant women, however, tended to have a slower
rate of decline of pABG than ApABG and higher enrichment at d 42 of
ApABG and pABG. These data support and extend our previous findings
indicating that pregnancy (gestational wk 1426) causes subtle changes
in folate metabolism but does not elicit substantial increases in the
rate or extent of folate turnover at these moderately high folate
intakes.
KEY WORDS: folate kinetics catabolism stable isotopes humans pregnancy
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