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. 1982 May;112(5):879-85.
doi: 10.1093/jn/112.5.879.

Availability to rats of zinc from soybean seeds as affected by maturity of seed, source of dietary protein, and soluble phytate

Availability to rats of zinc from soybean seeds as affected by maturity of seed, source of dietary protein, and soluble phytate

R M Welch et al. J Nutr. 1982 May.

Abstract

Male rats were used to assess the availability of zinc in soybean seeds (Glycine max, var. 'Amsoy') as affected by maturity of seed, dietary protein source, and exogenous dietary sodium phytate. Seeds were harvested from either 84- (immature) or 120-day-old (mature) plants grown in 65Zn-labeled nutrient solutions that contained either 0.066 or 0.262 ppm zinc as zinc sulfate. Increased zinc supply to plants increased the zinc content of seeds; immature seeds had higher concentrations of zinc than mature seeds. Phytic acid concentration averaged about 0.6 and 1.7% dry weight in immature and mature seeds, respectively. Seeds of each type were incorporated into meals fed to zinc-depleted rats. In experiment 1, rats fed mature, high-phytate seeds absorbed about 60% of the 65Zn in the seeds, whereas rats fed immature, low-phytate seeds absorbed about 89% of the 65Zn (P less than 0.05). In experiment 2, the source of dietary protein (egg albumen or soy protein) did not markedly affect 65Zn absorption by rats fed mature soybean seeds. In experiment 3, dietary sodium phytate (1.76% of diet as phytic acid) depressed (P less than 0.05) 65Zn absorption by about 16 and 44% from mature soybean seeds and zinc sulfate, respectively. Zinc in soybean seeds apparently was as readily available to rats as that reported for other legume and cereal seeds. Moreover, the nutritional quality of soybean seeds with respect to zinc apparently can be increased by increasing zinc supplies to plants.

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