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Laying hens can convert high doses of folic acid added to the feed into natural folates in eggs providing a novel source of food folate

Version 2 2024-03-12, 21:29
Version 1 2023-10-19, 21:12
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 21:29 authored by Leane Hoey, Helene McNulty, Elizabeth M. E. McCann, Kelvin J. McCracken, John M. Scott, Barbara Blaznik Marc, Anne M. Molloy, Ciaren Graham, Kristina Pentieva
<p>There are few good sources of natural food folates apart from green leafy vegetables and these may have a limited potential to increase folate status because of substantial losses that can occur during cooking. Fortified foods can overcome this but are controversial because of safety concerns regarding chronic exposure to high-dose folic acid (FA; the synthetic form). The aim of the present study was to develop eggs with an enriched natural folate content and minimal unmetabolised FA. Forty-eight, 30-week-old laying hens were randomised to receive the basal feed (formulated to provide 1 mg folate/kg feed) to which had been added one of the following FA levels (0, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 mg/kg feed). Total folate was measured in eggs collected throughout the 12-week study period and the FA content estimated at 12 weeks. Results showed that the maximal egg folate content was achieved by adding 16 mg FA/kg feed. At this optimal dose, the total folate content per egg was 75 microg (compared with 32 microg in a regular egg) of which FA represented at most 10%, a level which would probably be converted into natural folates by humans after ingestion. The results demonstrate that it is possible to use synthetic FA at high doses to produce novel animal foods enriched with natural folates in a cost-efficient process. Such foods may be particularly relevant to European populations without access to FA fortification and therefore dependent on natural food folate sources for the primary prevention of folate-related disease.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

British Journal of Nutrition

Volume

101

Issue

2

Pages/Article Number

206-212

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

ISSN

0007-1145

eISSN

1475-2662

Date Submitted

2013-01-23

Date Accepted

2013-01-23

Date of First Publication

2013-01-23

Date of Final Publication

2013-01-23

ePrints ID

7324

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