Transfer of Sulphur to the Digestive Tract of Sheep
PM Kennedy, JP Hogan, JR Lindsay and RM Hogan
Australian Journal of Biological Sciences
29(6) 525 - 532
Published: 1976
Abstract
The transfer of sulphate from plasma to digestive tract and from digestive tract to plasma in crossbred sheep was estimated by the use of isotope dilution techniques with Na235S04. The passage of 35S along the digestive tract was simultaneously measured by reference to two inert radioactive markers infused intraruminally. In the first experiment, three sheep given a roughage-based diet containing 174± 7 mg S/day received an intravenous infusion of Na23SS04 for 7 days before collections were made of plasma and of digesta from the rumen, abomasum and terminal ileum. Similar collections were made in the second experiment in which four sheep received intrahuninal infusions of Na23SS04. From estimates of infusion rate of 35S, specific radioactivity of 3SS in plasma and digesta and rate of flow of sulphur in the digestive tract the following calculations were made: The transfer of sulphate from the plasma to the rumen was calculated as 29 mg S/day. Of this only 12 mg S/day passed as organic sulphur in digesta from the stomach. As the net gain of sulphur in the stomach in this experiment was 153 mg/day, sulphate transferred from the plasma contributed only a small amount of sulphur derived from endogenous sources in the stomach. In contrast, the substantial passage of 35S into the intestinal lumen during intravenous infusion of 35S04 suggested that 38 and 41 mg S/day of the 236 and 145 mg organic S/day flowing from the small and large intestine respectively was derived from plasma sulphate, corresponding to about 26 % of the dose.https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9760525
© CSIRO 1976