Title: Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
1Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
- Paul D. Siciliano, Ph.D.
- Dept. of Animal Sciences
2Vitamin E and Immune Function
3Overview
- Brief review of immunology
- General overview of vitamin E
- Vitamin E requirements of horses
- Effect of vitamin E on immune function in horses
- Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Practical applications
4Review of Immunology
Categories of Immune Response
5Review of Immunology
- Three stages of the immune response
- Cognitive Phase (Induction)
- Amplification
- Effector Phase
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7Review of Immunology
- The immune system generates pro-oxidants,
potentially contributing to oxidative stress if
left unchecked - Part of normal metabolism
- Used as a defense mechanism
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9Review of Immunology
- Reactive oxygen species produced as a part of
normal metabolism
10Review of Immunology
11Review of Immunology
- Reactive oxygen species produced as a defense
mechanism - Oxidative burst
- Neutrophils and macrophages
- Produce superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and
hypochlorite - Bactericidal agents
12Review of ImmunologyOxidative Burst
NADPH Oxidase
bacteria
O2-?
NADP
Neutrophil/Macrophage Phagocytosis
13Cellular Antioxidant Defense Mechanisms
Cell Membrane
Reactive Oxygen Species
Lipid Oxidation
Cytosol
Hydrogen peroxide
Superoxide
Water
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15Overview
- Brief review of immunology
- General overview of vitamin E
- Vitamin E requirements of horses
- Effect of vitamin E on immune function in horses
- Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Practical applications
16Overview of Vitamin E
- Major Lipid Soluble Antioxidant
- Vitamin E containing compounds
- 4 tocopherols (alpha, beta, gamma, delta)
- 4 tocotrienols (alpha, beta, gamma, delta)
17RRR-Alpha-tocopherol
18Overview of Vitamin E
19Overview of Vitamin E
20Overview
- Brief review of immunology
- General overview of vitamin E
- Vitamin E requirements of horses
- Effect of vitamin E on immune function in horses
- Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Practical applications
21Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Present requirements (NRC, 1989)
- Maintenance 50 IU/kg DM
- All others 80 IU/kg DM
- Past requirements
- NRC (1973) req. not established
- NRC (1978) 15 IU/kg DM
22Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Work contributing to the current requirement
- Estimates from depletion-repletion-depletion
study (Roneus et al., 1986) - Clinical signs of capture myopathy in Przewalski
horses and zebra alleviated (NRC, 1989). - Improved humoral immune response (Baalsrud and
Overnes, 1986)
23Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Estimates from depletion-repletion-depletion
study (Roneus et al., 1986) - Mature idle Standardbreds
- 400 to 460 kg BW
- 2.5 mo depletion period (Basal diet 107 IU/d)
- Five Dietary Treatments (112 d n3/trt)
- Control (basal diet 107 IU/d)
- Basal 200 IU/d (switched to 5,400 IU/d at 2mo)
- Basal 600 IU/d
- Basal 1,800 IU/d
- Basal 5,400 IU/d
- 51-d depletion period
24Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Conclusions (Roneus et al., 1986)
- Optimization of tissue concentrations require
- 600 to 1,800 IU/d
- 70 to 209 IU/kg DM
- Assumes 430 kg BW DMI 2 BW
25Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
26Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Work contributing to the current requirement
- Estimates from depletion-repletion-depletion
study (Roneus et al., 1986) - Clinical signs of capture myopathy in Przewalski
horses and zebra alleviated (NRC, 1989). - Improved humoral immune response (Baalsrud and
Overnes, 1986)
27Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Clinical signs of capture myopathy in Przewalski
horses and zebra alleviated (NRC, 1989). - Clinical signs (temporary to persistent muscle
soreness and lameness) w/ diets containing 50
IU/kg DM - Clinical signs absent when fed diet containing
100 IU/kg DM
28Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Information is limited and different criteria of
adequacy support different conclusions,
establishing a single minimum requirement for
vitamin E is difficult. - (NRC, 1989)
29Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- One criterion that has not been examined in the
horse in sufficient detail is the amount of
vitamin E required for optimum immune function - (NRC, 1989)
30Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Work contributing to the current requirement
- Estimates from depletion-repletion-depletion
study (Roneus et al., 1986) - Clinical signs of capture myopathy in Przewalski
horses and zebra alleviated (NRC, 1989). - Improved humoral immune response (Baalsrud and
Overnes, 1986)
31Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Improved humoral immune response (Baalsrud and
Overnes, 1986) - Mature idle horses (600 kg BW)
- 4 Treatments for 168 d
- Control (18 IU E/kg DM 0.03 ppm DM Se) n4
- Vit. E (80 IU E/kg DM 0.03 ppm DM Se) n4
- Se (18 IU E/kg DM 0.5 ppm DM Se) n3
- Vit. E Se (80 IU E/kg DM 0.5 ppm DM Se) n4
- Vaccinated for influenza equi 1 2 and tetanus
following 84 d of dietary treatment
32Vitamin E Requirements of Horses
- Improved humoral immune response (Baalsrud and
Overnes, 1986) - Vit. E or Vit. E Se resulted in greater
antibody titers against influenza equi type 1 and
2 as compared to Ctrl or Se - No trt difference for tetanus
33Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
- Improved humoral immune response (Baalsrud and
Overnes, 1986) - Limitations
- Small number of horses/trt
- Inconsistent results between tetanus and
influenza titer response - Still provides evidence of an immunostimulatory
effect of vitamin E
34Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
- Effect of E on mare colostrum immunoglobin
concentration - (Hoffman et al., 1999)
- Previous observation
- Mares suppl. w/ corn oil had 4.2 fold increase in
colostrum IgG - Hypothesized high E of corn oil (327 IU/kg)
contributed to the effect
35Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
- Effect of E on mare colostrum immunoglobin
concentration - (Hoffman et al., 1999)
- 12 pregnant mares (TB and Morgan)
- Fed 80 vs 160 IU E/kg DM (n6/trt)
- 28 d prior to foaling
- 28 d post foaling
36Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
- Effect of E on mare colostrum immunoglobin
concentration - (Hoffman et al., 1999)
- Pre-suckled colostrum IgG concentration greater
in mares fed 160 IU E/kg DM - Tendency for greater serum IgG in foals suckling
mares fed 160 IU E/kg DM
37Vitamin E and Immune Function in Horses
- Conclusions
- Some evidence for an immunostimulatory effect
exists - Specific dietary recommendations are not clear
and require further clarification
38Overview
- Brief review of immunology
- General overview of vitamin E
- Vitamin E requirements of horses
- Effect of vitamin E on immune function in horses
- Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Practical applications
39Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Possible mechanisms
- Maintenance of cell membrane integrity
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41Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Possible mechanisms
- Maintenance of cell membrane integrity
- Effects on cell signal transduction
- E influences IL2 production
- IL2 critical for T cell proliferation and
differentiation
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43Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Possible mechanisms
- Maintenance of cell membrane integrity
- Effects on cell signal transduction
- E influences IL2 production
- IL2 critical for T cell proliferation and
differentiation - Reduction of immunosuppressive PGE2
- PGE2 can inhibit T cell activation
- E can inhibit cyclooxygenase (rate limiting step
in PGE2 synthesis
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45Overview
- Brief review of immunology
- General overview of vitamin E
- Vitamin E requirements of horses
- Effect of vitamin E on immune function in horses
- Immunostimulatory mechanisms of vitamin E
- Practical applications
46Practical Applications
- Situations challenging the immune system
- Neonate
- Intense exercise
- Transport
- Old age
- Close confinement housing
47Practical Applications
- Recommendations?
- Limited information
- Confined to mature idle horses, broodmares and
foals - Available evidence suggests wide range
- 80 to 160 IU E/kg DM
- Consequences of over-supplementation?
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