Effects of dietary selenium yeast supplementation on production performance, apparent nutrient digestibility, serum antioxidant parameters, and selenoprotein content in velvet antlers of sika deer (Cervus nippon)
Weili Sun, Cong Huang, Hongpeng Shi, Guangyu Li, Zhen Liu, Lisheng Zhou, Haiping Zhao

TL;DR
This study shows that adding selenium yeast to the diet of sika deer improves nutrient digestion, antioxidant levels, and selenoprotein production in velvet antlers.
Contribution
The study identifies optimal selenium yeast levels for enhancing selenoprotein synthesis and nutrient metabolism in sika deer.
Findings
0.3 mg/kg selenium yeast improved nutrient digestibility and serum antioxidant capacity.
1.2 mg/kg selenium yeast significantly increased SELENOP protein in all antler tissue layers.
Both 0.3 and 1.2 mg/kg selenium yeast enhanced GPX4 and SELENOP selenoprotein synthesis.
Abstract
Selenium is an essential trace element for the growth of sika deer (Cervus nippon). However, the optimal dietary supplementation level and its effects on growth performance, nutrient metabolism, and antioxidant capacity in the deer, as well as selenoprotein synthesis in velvet antlers, remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effects of different dietary selenium yeast levels on these key physiological and molecular indicators. Twenty healthy, 5-year-old male sika deer at the antler growth stage were randomly assigned to four groups (n = 5): SY1 (control, 0 mg/kg Se), SY2 (0.3 mg/kg Se), SY3 (1.2 mg/kg Se), and SY4 (4.8 mg/kg Se). The trial included a 7-day adaptation period followed by a 60-day experimental period. Production performance, apparent nutrient digestibility, serum antioxidant status, and selenoprotein expression (GPX4 and SELENOP) in different antler tissue…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSelenium in Biological Systems · Animal Nutrition and Physiology · Ruminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology
