Journal of Nutrition Vol. 48 No. 1 September 1952, pp. 13-30
Copyright © 1952 by American Society for Nutrition
Liver Storage of Vitamin A by Male and Female Rats
Four Figures
V. H. Booth1
Dunn Nutritional Laboratory, Cambridge, England
- 1. Vitamin A-free rats were given carotene in oil or vegetables, or halibut liver oil, then killed. Vitamin A was assayed by the SbCl3 test in the livers or kidneys or both.
- 2. The standard deviation of a liver determination of vitamin A within any one group varied with the 0.74th power of the mean liver value for the group.
- 3. After they had ingested carotene, more vitamin A was found in the livers of females than of males. Both lost their stores at similar rates. Hence male livers depleted sooner than female and the female/male storage ratio increased with time.
- 4. The absorption efficiency of carotene was not linked to sex.
- 5. Neither sex showed correlation between storage and growth rate.
- 6. Correlation was negligible between storage and body weight among rats of one sex at the same age similarly dosed.
- 7. Infant rats had negligible sex differences in body weight and liver storage. Young rats stored more than middle-aged rats from the same intake, but old rats stored the same proportion as middle-aged rats of similar size.
- 8. Twin females, though weighing more and growing faster than duodecet males, stored more vitamin A.
- 9. On vitamin intakes too low for maximum growth, males outgrew females. After being given a vitamin A-free diet from weaning, or after one dose of vitamin A, males showed deficiency symptoms only slightly sooner than females.
- 10. Males and females had similar kidney levels shortly after a dose. The level in male kidneys increased with time, but in female kidneys no comparable rise was found.
- 11. Male and female dose-response curves had different slopes. The difference between male and female liver stores at different doses was a constant proportion (11%) of the dose. The threshold dose, below which there was no storage, was higher for males than for females.
- 12. Items 5, 8, 9 and 11 show that the sex-liver-storage difference cannot be related to different growth rates. Another hypothesis, that liver storage is inversely controlled by body weight, is supported by items 7 and 11, refuted by 6 and 8. This and other possibilities are discussed under Conclusions.
1 Member of the scientific staff of the Agricultural Research Council.
Manuscript received 29 December 1951.