Effects of dietary boron in rats fed a vitamin D-deficient diet

Environ Health Perspect. 1994 Nov;102 Suppl 7(Suppl 7):55-8. doi: 10.1289/ehp.94102s755.

Abstract

Although boron has long been known to be a required nutrient for plants, it was not until recently that there was any suggestion of a nutritional requirement for animals and humans. Addition of boron to the diet of vitamin D-deficient chicks indicated that boron may play a role in animal nutrition. Studies with rats have demonstrated that supplemental dietary boron has most marked effects when the diet is deficient in known nutrients. We observed higher apparent-balance values of calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus for rats fed a vitamin D-deprived diet with dietary supplemental boron (2.72 ppm), than for rats fed the same diet without added boron (0.16 ppm). The treatment group with dietary supplemental boron demonstrated a high degree of variability in response to boron. We hypothesize that relatively large and variable vitamin D stores in weanling rats from a colony supplemented with 3000 IU vitamin D/kg diet accounted for the observed variable response. A recent, unpublished study using weanling rats from a low-vitamin D colony appears to support this hypothesis.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Boron / administration & dosage
  • Boron / physiology*
  • Calcium / metabolism
  • Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
  • Female
  • Magnesium / metabolism
  • Male
  • Nutritional Requirements
  • Phosphorus / metabolism
  • Rats
  • Rats, Sprague-Dawley
  • Tissue Distribution
  • Vitamin D Deficiency / physiopathology*

Substances

  • Phosphorus
  • Magnesium
  • Boron
  • Calcium