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Selenomethionine supplementation and expression of selenosugars, selenocysteine, and other selenometabolites in rat liver.

Katarzyna BierłaRyszard ŁobińskiRyszard LobinskiRoger A Sunde
Published in: Metallomics : integrated biometal science (2023)
Selenomethionine (SeMet) as a methionine analog can be incorporated into protein. In turkeys, we recently found that selenium (Se) as selenite is not metabolized to SeMet but rather to selenosugars (seleno-N-acetyl galactosamine) bound to protein as well as to selenocysteine (Sec) in selenoproteins. To characterize the metabolism of SeMet, we fed rats graded levels of SeMet from 0 to 5 μg Se/g in a Se-deficient diet for 4 wk, and investigated the fate and accumulation of liver Se using HPLC coupled with Se-specific (ICP MS) and molecule specific (Orbitrap MS/MS) detection. Up to 0.24 μg Se/g (Se requirement for maximal glutathione peroxidase activity), Sec accounted for ∼40% of total liver Se whereas SeMet only accounted for 3-11%. Analysis of water-soluble extracts found negligible low molecular weight (LMW) Se species in rats fed 0 and 0.08 μg Se/g, including no SeMet. At 0.24 μg Se/g and above, SeMet accounted for only 10% of LMW Se species, whereas methyl- and glutathionyl selenosugars accounted for 70% of LMW Se species. Above the Se requirement, SeMet was ∼30% of the proteinaceous amino acids, whereas Sec levels fell to 5% in rats fed 5 μg Se/g as SeMet. Lastly, considerably less inorganic Se was bound to liver protein with high SeMet as compared to selenite in a parallel study. SeMet is efficiently metabolized and mixes with the common Se metabolite pool, where Se is preferentially incorporated into Sec and Sec-selenoproteins until selenoproteins plateau; with high SeMet intake, Se is increasing accumulated as LMW selenosugars and as selenosugar-decorated proteins.
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