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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
Rec
)
58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One member of each pair of twin lambs from 37 five-and six-year-old Scottish blackface ewes, grazing reseeded pasture suspected of causing a
molybdenum
-sulphur induced copper deficiency in sheep, was given an injection of 12.5 mg copper calcium edetate at about eight weeks of age. Plasma copper concentrations of these lambs were maintained in the normal range by further injections of copper as required (treatment group). The remaining member of each twin pair received no copper therapy (control group). The control lambs and all ewes showed marked hypocupraemia throughout lactation, whereas the plasma copper concentrations of the treatment lambs, and also of single lambs with continuous access to unimproved hill grazings, remained normal. The live-weight gain of the treatment lambs was significantly greater than that of the control lambs, the difference in mean live-weights after 12 weeks being 2.5 kg. All lambs showed some degree of osteoporosis; this was most severe in the control lambs which had less dense bones and were also more susceptible to bone fractures and to disease. Differences between treatment and control lambs were also observed in haematological parameters and in fleece characteristics.
Vet
Rec
1979 May 19
PMID:A study of the effects of copper deficiency in Scottish blackface lambs on improved hill pasture. 57 17
An experiment was designed to investigate the practical possibility of incorporating small quantities of
molybdenum
salts into the high copper diets of intensively fattening lambs to prevent or reduce the gradual accumulation of copper from feed. At slaughter (14 weeks of age) lambs which had received Mo supplement (7.7 ppm Mo) showed liver copper levels which were 40.1 per cent lower than those in the control group which, in turn, presented a mean liver copper concentration near the upper limit of the normal range for adult sheep. Changes in blood ceruloplasmin and SGOT levels and in the comparative rate of accumulation of liver copper indicated that the addition of ammonium molybdate to the concentrate diet might be a useful method of reducing the risk of nutritional copper poisoning in housed sheep.
Vet
Rec
1976 Jul 31
PMID:The use of molybdenum for the prevention of nutritional copper poisoning in housed sheep. 98 81
The aetiology of copper deficiency in grazing ruminants has been clarified by a number of recent discoveries: the low availability of copper in lush grazed pasture compared with conserved forage; the inhibitory effects on absorption of small increases in herbage
molybdenum
and sulphur and the antagonism from iron ingested in soil; and the wide genetic variation in copper absorption between different breeds of sheep. The economic importance of copper deficiency has been emphasised by the discovery of unsuspected causes of loss: increased susceptibility to infection and growth retardation in lambs and infertility in cattle. The diagnosis of functional copper deficiency has been improved by the addition of erythrocyte superoxide dismutase to the assays of copper status.
Vet
Rec
1986 Nov 22
PMID:Copper deficiency in ruminants; recent developments. 381 Nov 58
An attempt has been made to assess the importance of systemic sites of interaction from the effect of dietary
molybdenum
(Mo) on the protection afforded by a single sc injection of copper (Cu) to 29 initially hypocupraemic 5-year-old ewes, maintained on a low Cu diet. They were fed a diet of 1 kg/day containing 1.3 mg of Cu/kg supplemented with sodium sulphate which provided 1.7 gm of sodium per kg. Group A was given no further supplement. Group B was given added Mo, 25 mg/kg. Group C was given added Cu, 10 mg/kg. After 7 months, several animals in each group were injected sc with a single dose of 46.5 mg of Cu in the form of copper calcium edetate (Coprin). Blood samples were taken at intervals from the injected ewes over a 250-day period. All ewes were mated after 12 months on the diet. Injected ewes were approaching the 4th month of gestation when the last blood sample was taken at 250 days. Total Cu in plasma was determined by atomic absorption spectometry. Direct reacting Cu in plasma, cerulosplasmin oxidase activity, and hemoglobin were also estimated. Plasma Cu concentrations had increased to normal levels in 14 days in Group A after the Cu injections. Group B animals showed a greater increase, mean values exceeding those of Groups A and C, between Days 28-129 (p less than .01). Plasma Cu levels declined in ewes not given supplementary Cu after the 177th day. The final values for Groups A and B were similar to those found before injection. The direct reacting Cu in each group was increased after 7 days (p less than .05). This effect was most marked in the Mo supplemented ewes (Group B). The effect of Mo persisted until the final bleeding. Direct reacting Cu was only a minor part of the early response in total plasma copper of Group B ewes. Dietary Mo did not inhibit the incorporation of injected Cu into ceruloplasmin. The Mo-supplemented ewes were in poorer condition than copper-supplemented ewes. All groups gained in weight after the injections. The sc injection of Cu at 5 months prior to mating imporved fertility in Groups A and B. There was no evidence that dietary Mo impa ired the metabolism of parenteral Cu. However, it is known to deplete r uminants of Cu when the diet provides the only source of Cu. It is ther efore thought that the site of the Cu with Mo interaction is in the gut. If infertility due to Cu deficiency is suspected in a flock, an injection of Cu immediately prior to mating may improve conception rate and provide sufficient Cu to reduce the incidence of swayback.
Vet
Rec
1974 Aug 24
PMID:The effect of dietary molybdenum on hypocupraemic ewes treated by subcutaneous copper. 444 11
We carried out
rec
assays on 127 metal compounds with Bacillus subtilis to check their DNA-damaging capacity and mutagenicity. Certain compounds of beryllium, cobalt, cesium, iridium, osmium, platinum, rhodium, antimony, tellurium, thallium and vanadium were newly found to be positive in addition to those of known positive metals such as arsenic, cadmium, chromium, mercury,
molybdenum
and selenium. Reverse mutation assays with Escherichia coli and Salmonella strains showed that compounds of rhodium (RhCl3), tellurium (Na2H4TeO6, Na2TeO3) and platinum (PtCl4, (NH4)2PtCl6) are potent mutagens.
...
PMID:Rec assay and mutagenicity studies on metal compounds. 676 36
A field trial was carried out with young cattle grazing
molybdenum
-rich pastures to test the efficacy of supplying copper salts in drinking water. One group was given two copper injections and 1.8 kg barley supplemented with 125 mg/kg copper, while the other received drinking water containing 2 to 3 mg/litre copper as copper sulphate supplied by means of a proportioner. The results demonstrated that this low concentration of copper in the water was effective in maintaining normal blood levels and in preventing scouring and subsequent loss of condition. The proportioner was capable of finely controlling the level of copper added to the water.
Vet
Rec
1982 Sep 04
PMID:Copper supplementation of drinking water for cattle grazing molybdenum-rich pastures. 713 69
Copper toxicity occurred in North Ronaldsay sheep fed on a diet of terrestrial herbage relatively high in
molybdenum
. Five sheep were taken from the island of North Ronaldsay, Orkney to the veterinary investigation centre at Thurso and fed solely on the herbage of the laboratory paddocks, supplemented in winter by hay made from these paddocks. The level of copper,
molybdenum
, zinc and total sulphur in the terrestrial herbage was analysed, together with the seaweeds which form the major part of the diet on North Ronaldsay. Serum copper, vitamin B12 and serum aspartate aminotransferase levels were obtained. Four of the five sheep died on this diet of terrestrial herbage and had liver copper levels of 1379, 1723, 2279 and 2281 mg/kg. The susceptibility of the North Ronaldsay breed of Orkney sheep to copper poisoning when first introduced to a diet of purely terrestrial herbage is demonstrated by the high liver copper levels of the four dead sheep compared to the normal serum copper levels and unimpaired health of two other breeds of sheep and a north country Cheviot cross North Ronaldsay ram.
Vet
Rec
1982 Sep 25
PMID:Copper poisoning in sheep from North Ronaldsay maintained on a diet of terrestrial herbage. 714 42
The oral administration of a small dose of cupric oxide "needles" (CuOn), providing 0.5 g copper, to hypocupraemic ewes maintained on a copper-deficient diet alleviated hypocupraemia for 111 days when the diet was supplemented with
molybdenum
and sulphate and for 301 days when the diet was not supplemented. The same amount of copper given as cupric sulphate was approximately half as effective. The administration of a large dose of CuOn, providing 40 g copper, to hypocupraemic steers and heifers alleviated hypocupraemia for not less than 41 days, at which time a substantial reserve of copper (428 mg) remained in the liver. The absorbability of copper in CuOn was estimated to be 8.3 per cent and 3.8 per cent (depending on diet) for sheep. It was calculated that enough absorbable copper could be provided in a single dose to meet the net copper requirements of ewes for several years. This new form of copper therapy demands a totally different approach from that associated with parenteral copper usage.
Vet
Rec
1981 May 09
PMID:Effectiveness of orally administered cupric oxide needles in alleviating hypocupraemia in sheep and cattle. 725 28
Methods for the control of induced or simple hypocupraemia in cattle were tested using a free-choice copper supplement or by adding a soluble copper salt to the water supply, using a specially designed proportioner. In
molybdenum
induced hypocupraemia the provision of a free-choice supplement containing 2500 mg Cu per kg resulted in only 10 out of 18 of the cows tested having adequate serum copper levels after a five month grazing period. Supplementation of water supplies to a level of 5 mg Cu per litre was effective in raising and maintaining serum copper at normal levels in a herd of low copper status when offered for a similar period. In experimentally produced molybdenosis, 2 to 3 mg per litre in drinking water corrected the associated diarrhoea and abolished the anomalous blood fractions found at high levels of
molybdenum
intake in three and five days respectively. It is suggested that water supplementation using a proportioner such as the one described is an effective way of combating both simple and induced hypocupraemia in grazing cattle.
Vet
Rec
1980 Apr 19
PMID:Control of hypocupraemia in cattle by addition of copper to water supplies. 737 93
The concentrations of trichloroacetic acid (tca)-soluble copper and caeruloplasmin were determined in 345 serum samples taken from cattle in March 1998 by eight Scottish Agricultural College veterinary disease surveillance centres serving areas with soils ranging from being 'high' in
molybdenum
(Thurso) to 'low' (Perth and St Boswells). The mean concentrations varied significantly between the centres, with Thurso having the lowest values for both variables. There were strong linear regressions (r>0.8) between caeruloplasmin and tca-soluble copper for each centre but no significant differences in slope or intercept between the areas with the highest and lowest soil
molybdenum
, and the pooled regression accounted for 88 per cent of the variation. The distribution of the ratios of caeruloplasmin to tca-soluble copper, unlike those of the individual variables, was not normal, and 70 per cent of the values fell within 10 per cent of the mean ratio of 20.3 mg/micromol and close to the 22 mg/micromol copper expected in pure caeruloplasmin. Low ratios were generally associated with low tca-soluble copper. Ratios above 24 were found in 8 per cent of the samples and were probably attributable to acute-phase reactions and the non-specificity of the assay for caeruloplasmin.
Vet
Rec
2008 Feb 23
PMID:Relationships between the concentrations of trichloroacetic acid-soluble copper and caeruloplasmin in the serum of cattle from areas with different soil concentrations of molybdenum. 1829 65
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