Age and dietary form of vitamin K affect menaquinone-4 concentrations in male fischer 344 rats

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Abstract

Phylloquinone, the primary dietary form of vitamin K, is converted to menaquinone-4 (MK-4) in certain tissues. MK-4 may have tissue-specific roles independent of those traditionally identified with vitamin K. Fischer 344 male rats of different ages (2, 12, and 24 mo, n = 20 per age group) were used to compare the conversion of phylloquinone to MK-4 with an equivalent dose of another dietary form of vitamin K, 2′,3′-dihydrophylloquinone. Rats were age- and diet-group pair-fed phylloquinone (198 ± 9.0 μg/kg diet) or dihydrophylloquinone (172 ± 13.0 μg/kg diet) for 28 d. MK-4 was the primary form of vitamin K in serum, spleen, kidney, testes, bone marrow, and brain myelin fractions, regardless of age group. MK-4 concentrations were significantly lower in kidney, heart, testes, cortex (myelin), and striatum (myelin) in the dihydrophylloquinone diet group compared with the phylloquinone diet group (P<0.05). The MK-4 concentrations in 2-mo-old rats were lower in liver, spleen, kidney, heart, and cortex (myelin) but higher in testes compared with 24-mo-old rats (P<0.05). However, there were no age-specific differences in MK-4 concentrations among the rats fed the 2 diets. These data suggest that dihydrophylloquinone, which differs from phylloquinone in its side phytyl chain, is absorbed but its intake results in less MK-4 in certain tissues. Dihydrophylloquinone may be used in models for the study of tissue-specific vitamin K deficiency. © 2008 American Society for Nutrition.

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Booth, S. L., Peterson, J. W., Smith, D., Shea, M. K., Chamberland, J., & Crivello, N. (2008). Age and dietary form of vitamin K affect menaquinone-4 concentrations in male fischer 344 rats. Journal of Nutrition, 138(3), 492–496. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/138.3.492

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