Efficiency of sepiolite in broilers diet as
uranium adsorbent
Branislava M. Mitrović, Milijan
Jovanović, Mirjana LazarevićMacanović, Djordje Janaćković, Nikola
Krstić, Mirjana Stojanović, et al.
Radiation and Environmental
Biophysics
ISSN 0301-634X
Radiat Environ Biophys
DOI 10.1007/s00411-015-0589-2
1 23
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Radiat Environ Biophys
DOI 10.1007/s00411-015-0589-2
ORIGINAL PAPER
Efficiency of sepiolite in broilers diet as uranium adsorbent
Branislava M. Mitrović • Milijan Jovanović •
Mirjana Lazarević-Macanović • Djordje Janaćković •
Nikola Krstić • Mirjana Stojanović • Milorad Mirilović
Received: 2 October 2014 / Accepted: 17 January 2015
Ó Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2015
Abstract The use of phosphate mineral products in animal nutrition, as a major source of phosphor and calcium,
can lead to uranium entering the food chain. The aim of the
present study was to determine the protective effect of
natural sepiolite and sepiolite treated with acid for broilers
after oral intake of uranium. The broilers were contaminated for 7 days with 25 mg/uranyl nitrate per day.
Two different adsorbents (natural sepiolite and sepiolite
treated with acid) were given via gastric tube immediately
after the oral administration of uranium. Natural sepiolite
reduced uranium distribution by 57 % in kidney, 80 % in
liver, 42 % in brain, and 56 % in muscle. A lower protective effect was observed after the administration of sepiolite treated with acid, resulting in significant damage of
B. M. Mitrović (&) M. Lazarević-Macanović N. Krstić
Department of Radiology and Radiation Hygiene, Faculty
of Veterinary Medicine, University of Belgrade, Bulevar
Oslobodjenja 18, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia
e-mail: slavatab@vet.bg.ac.rs
M. Jovanović
Department of Veterinary Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Belgrade, Bulevar Oslobodjenja 18,
11000 Belgrade, Serbia
D. Janaćković
Faculty of Technology and Metallurgy, University of Belgrade,
Karnegijeva 4, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia
M. Stojanović
Institute for Technology of Nuclear and Other Mineral Row
Materials, University of Belgrade, Bulevar Franš d‘Eperea 86,
11000 Belgrade, Serbia
M. Mirilović
Department of Economics and Statistics, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Belgrade, Bulevar Oslobodjenja 18,
11000 Belgrade, Serbia
intestinal villi in the form of shortening, fragmentation, and
necrosis, and histopathological lesions on kidney in the
form of edema and abruption of epithelial cells in tubules.
When broilers received only sepiolite treated with acid (no
uranyl nitrate), shortening of intestinal villi occurred.
Kidney injuries were evident when uranium concentrations
in kidney were 0.88 and 1.25 lg/g dry weight. It is concluded that adding of natural sepiolite to the diets of
broilers can reduce uranium distribution in organs by significant amount without adverse side effects.
Keywords Adsorbents Broilers Histopathology
Sepiolite Toxicity Uranium
Introduction
Intensive animal husbandry involves the use of phosphate
mineral supplements as the major source of phosphorus and
calcium, which are considered as essential metabolic elements. For farm animals, a key source of uranium is
phosphate mineral supplementation, mostly which is dicalcium phosphate, in which the specific activity of uranium can reach 3,000 Bq/kg dry weight (Arruda-Neto et al.
1997; Casacuberta et al. 2009; Mitrović et al. 2014). Dicalcium phosphate can be also used as a mineral fertilizer.
According to the regulations of the Republic of Serbia, the
import and sale of mineral fertilizers is forbidden when the
activity concentration of 238U and 226Ra is higher than
1,600 and 1,000 Bq/kg fresh weight, respectively, but the
regulations do not include phosphate mineral supplements
for animal nutrition (Official Gazette of RS 2011, 2013).
This mineral supplement is often given to animals from an
early period of life to slaughtering and can to lead uranium
entering the food chain. Ingestion of feed, water, and soil is
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Radiat Environ Biophys
a major pathway for animal contamination with radionuclides (IAEA 2010). Water contaminated with uranium
would be the most influential parameter contributing to
uranium activity concentration in chicken meat (Jeambrun
et al. 2012).
Although uranium is radioactive, its adverse health effects are primarily a result of its chemical rather than radiological toxicity (Keith et al. 2013). Very young animals
can absorb greater quantities of uranium than older animals, as shown by Sullivan and Gorham (1982). Previous
investigations performed on broilers show that after uranium contamination, the most uranium was accumulated in
kidney and liver, while muscles were not a major target for
uranium deposition (Mitrović et al. 2014). In rats, the
transcellular pathway is dominant for gastrointestinal absorption of dissolved uranium compounds in the small intestine (Dublineau et al. 2006).
To protect animals from different toxins, such as mycotoxins, heavy metals, and radionuclides, the use of adsorbents applied as a feed additive has been recommended
(Karovic et al. 2013; Mitrović et al. 2012; Oguz 2011;
Papaioannou et al. 2005; Rizzi et al. 2003). Sepiolite
(Si12O30 Mg8 (OH)4(H2O)48H2O) is a naturally occurring
fibrous clay mineral of sedimentary origin. It is porous clay
with a large specific surface area and with a high ability to
absorb inorganic as well as organic compounds and heavy
metals (Lazarević et al. 2007, 2009). It can be used as a
pellet binder for improving pellet quality (Angulo et al.
1996). Adding 2 % of sepiolite in starter and growth periods improved growth performances and feed efficiency
(Ayed et al. 2008). When added as a feed supplement, it
significantly increased organic matter digestibility, decreased the water-relative viscosity of jejunal digesta in
broilers, and improved the activity of digestive enzymes
(Ouhida et al. 2000).
The adsorption capacity of sepiolites suggests that this
mineral is effective for the removal of Pb2?, Cd2?, and
Sr2? from polluted waters (Lazarević et al. 2007). Donat
(2009) founded that sepiolite is suitable as sorbent material
for recovery and adsorption of uranium (VI) ions from
aqueous solutions. However, there is insufficient data about
using this mineral adsorbent to protect animals from the
alimentary contamination with uranium.
Consequently, the aim of the present study was to determine the ability of sepiolite to adsorb uranium (VI) at
different solution pH values (in vitro conditions), and to
explore the possibility of its use to adsorb uranium in
broilers digestive tract to reduce gut transfer. Since the acid
treatment changed the sorption capacity of uranium (Kilislioglu and Aras 2010), sorption of uranium on natural
sepiolite (S) and sepiolite treated with acid (TS) was investigated. The experiments were performed with broilers
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receiving uranyl nitrate and natural sepiolite (S) or sepiolite
treated with acid (TS), via gastric tube, during a 7-day
period. In order to determine the toxicity of uranium,
histopathological examinations of kidney, liver, brain, and
small intestine were performed.
Materials and methods
Adsorbents
Sepiolite from deposits near Čačak, Republic of Serbia,
was used as initial raw material. The samples were dried
for 2 h in an oven at 150 °C, then pulverized in a
porcelain mortar, and passed through a sieve with
varying mesh size. Fractions containing particles of
250–800 lm diameter were used. The sepiolite activated
by acid was prepared with 4 mol/dm3 HCl. Activation
was performed at room temperature, at a ratio of 10 g of
sepiolite and 100 cm3 acid solution, for 10 h. Following
activation, the solid phase was separated by filtration and
washed with hot distilled water until there was a negative reaction to Cl ions. The solid was dried for 2 h at
150 °C.
Uranium sorption (in vitro conditions)
In order to investigate the uranium (VI) adsorption on
natural sepiolite (NS) and sepiolite treated with acid
(AS), different amounts (0.01, 0.025, 0.05, 0.1, 0.25, 0.5,
0.7, 0.9, and 1 g) of adsorbent were added to 50 ml of
uranium (VI) solution. The adsorption of uranium (VI)
ions on natural sepiolite (NS) and sepiolite treated with
acid (AS) was determined at two pH values, pH values 3
and 6. These pH values were selected because in the
digestive tract of broilers, the pH values are in the range
from 2.5 to 8 (crop: 5.5, proventriculus/gizzard: 2.5–3.5,
duodenum: 5–6, jejunum: 6.5–7.0, ileum: 7.0–7.5, colon:
8) (Denbow 2000; Klasing 1999). The pH value of the
solution was adjusted with HNO3. The uranium (VI)
solutions were prepared using uranyl nitrate hexahydrate
[UO2(NO3)26H2O] (Sigma-Aldrich Co.). The initial
concentration of uranium (VI) ions was constant at each
probe, i.e., 10 mg U/ml (500 mg U/50 ml) in pure distilled water. The samples were shaken for 5, 10, 15, 30,
60, 120, 240, 360, and 1,440 min in a mechanical shaker
(150 rpm).
After the reaction time, solids were separated by filtration and the concentration of the uranium (VI) remaining in
the solution was determined using a fluorometric method
(see below). The percentage of uranium adsorbed (%) was
calculated by Eq. 1:
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Adsorption (%Þ ¼ ðCi Cf =Ci Þ 100
ð1Þ
where Ci is the initial uranium (VI) concentration and Cf is
the uranium (VI) concentration in the final solution. All
experiments were performed in duplicate.
Uranium sorption (in vivo conditions)
Experiments were performed with 35-day-old broilers of
linear hybrid Hybro, weighing around 1,000 g. Thirty-six
broilers were randomly selected for the experiment. Food
and water intake were ad libitum. They were kept under
constant temperature (21 ± 2 °C) with a 12:12-h (light–
dark) cycle. The birds were divided into six experimental
groups, with six birds per group. The zero group (0) was
administered neither the uranyl nitrate solution nor
adsorbents.
During the seven days, the birds in groups 1, 2, and 3
were contaminated via gastric tube, with a uranyl nitrate
water solution (UO2(NO3)26H2O) (Sigma-Aldrich Co.), in
a quantity of 25 mg uranyl nitrate/per day. The control
group (1) received only uranyl nitrate and no adsorbents.
Immediately after the uranyl nitrate contamination, the
broilers in the group 2 received a dose of 2 g of natural
sepiolite (S) daily, while the broilers in group 3 received
2 g of sepiolite treated with acid (TS). Broilers in group 4
received only the adsorbent natural sepiolite (2 g/day),
whereas the broilers in group 5 received only sepiolite
treated with acid (2 g/day), also via gastric tube.
All the birds from each group were stunned and then
killed by cervical dislocation, on the 8th day of the experimental period. Uranium concentration was determined
in muscle, kidney, liver, and brain. Histopathological
analyses were performed on samples of the small intestine,
kidney, liver, and brain.
Sample preparation
The organs (kidney, liver, brain, muscle) were weighed to
measure the fresh weight and then dried at 105 °C. After
drying, all samples were dissolved by microwave digestion
using ‘‘Milestone Ethos 1.’’
Quantification of uranium
The uranium content in the initial solution, filtrate, muscle,
and organs of broilers (kidney, liver, brain) was determined
by a fluorometric method based on the fluorescence of
uranium in a fused mixture of NaF, Na2CO3, and K2CO3,
using a ‘‘Jarrell Ash 26-000 Division.’’ Dried samples
(20 g) were ashed at 450 °C in a muffle furnace for 2 h,
after which the ash was dissolved in 5.0 ml 10.3 M
HNO3 ? 5.0 ml of 24 M HF and then dried on a hot plate.
The residue was redissolved in 5.0 ml 10.3 M HNO3 and
dried again followed by another dissolution in 5.0 ml
10.3 M HNO3, and again dried (to remove free fluoride).
The final ash was dissolved in 25.0 ml 12.7 M HNO3 for
the determination of uranium. Aliquot samples
(5.0–10.0 ml) of the dissolved ash were transferred to
125-ml separatory funnels containing 10.0 ml saturated
Al(NO3)3 and 10.0 ml 0.1 M TOPO (trioctylphosphinoxide, [CH3(CH2)7]3PO) in ethyl acetate. Funnels were vigorously shaken for 5 min, and the organic (upper) and
aqueous (lower) phases were allowed to separate. The
uranium complex was separated into the organic phase.
Small volumes (0.1 ml) of the organic phase were transferred to platinum fusion dishes (10 mm in diameter)
containing 0.75 mg 9 % NaF ? 91 % NaKCO3 pellets,
dried under high-intensity lamps, fused at 700 °C for
5 min, and then cooled. Finally, the intensity of fluorescence was determined in a fluorometer (Thermo-Jarrell
Ash Corp., Franklin, MA, USA). The concentration of
uranium was determined from standard uranium calibration
curves (lower detection limit of 0.01 mg/g fused pellet,
correlation coefficient R [ 0.997) (Stojanovic et al. 2010).
Histopathological analyses
After the birds were killed, samples of the small intestine,
kidney, liver, and brain were rinsed with NaCl 0.9 % and
fixed in 10 % formaldehyde solution, dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, and cut into 5-lm-thick sections.
Histopathological slides of 5 lm were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E).
Results
In vitro experiments
The kinetics of uranium (VI) ions adsorption at different
pH values was studied. The pH values of the initial solution
are an important variable for the adsorption of uranium
(VI) ions on the adsorbents (Donat and Aytas 2005). The
uptake of uranium (VI) ions at pH 6 by natural sepiolite
and sepiolite treated with acid was rapid reaching 100 %
after 5 min, for 0.5 g adsorbents, remaining constant during 24 h. Similar adsorption was observed for same
amounts of natural sepiolite at pH 3 (Fig. 1). However,
uranium (VI) adsorption by 0.5 g sepiolite treated with acid
at pH 3 was lower and significantly slower, but increased
over time. Desorption processes were not observed during
the time of investigation.
The influence of the mass of adsorbents to remove
uranium is shown in Table 1. Binding capacity increases
with mass for both scenarios. Natural sepiolite, at pH 3,
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Fig. 1 Adsorption of uranium
(VI) ions on 0.5 g natural
sepiolite (S) and 0.5 g sepiolite
treated with acid (TS), at pH 3
and different contact times
Table 1 Adsorption of uranium ions by different amounts of natural sepiolite and sepiolite treated with acid, at pH 6 and 3, and a contact time of
2h
Mass of adsorbent (g)
Uranium concentration in filtrate (lg/cm3) at pH 6
Uranium concentration in filtrate (lg/cm3) at pH 3
Natural sepiolite
Natural sepiolite
Sepiolite treated with acid
Sepiolite treated with acid
0.01
1.29 ± 0.03
3.59 ± 0.49
9.09 ± 0.18
/
0.025
0.19 ± 0.02
1.55 ± 0.24
8.57 ± 0.19
/
0.05
0.04 ± 0.01
0.24 ± 0.05
8.28 ± 0.15
/
0.1
0.04 ± 0.01
0.03 ± 0.01
4.46 ± 0.12
9.19 ± 0.64
0.25
0.5
0.03 ± 0.01
0.04 ± 0.01
0.02 ± 0.01
0.25 ± 0.01
0.06 ± 0.01
0.04 ± 0.01
8.58 ± 0.55
3.55 ± 0.23
0.7
0.03 ± 0.01
0.26 ± 0.01
0.02 ± 0.01
2.50 ± 0.37
0.9
/
/
0.02 ± 0.01
0.44 ± 0.07
1
/
/
0.02 ± 0.01
0.19 ± 0.05
showed higher adsorption index of uranium (VI) ions than
sepiolite treated with acid. Lazarevic et al. (2007) reported
that acid activation of sepiolite does not lead to an increase
in the adsorption capacity of heavy metal, which is confirmed by the present study. Results shown in Fig. 1 and
Table 1 were used for setting up the parameters for the
in vivo studies described below, where a mass ratio adsorbent/uranium of 80:1 (2 g of each adsorbent and 25 mg
uranium) was used.
In vivo experiments
Uranium was detected in kidney, liver, and brain of broilers
in the control contaminated group (group 1). The same
results were obtained for groups (2 and 3) where the
broilers received adsorbents after the contamination
(Table 2). In the second group (uranyl nitrate ? S), uranium concentration in liver was lower by a factor of 5 than
in liver from the control group, while the concentration of
uranium in kidneys and brain was reduced by 2.3 times and
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1.7 times. Administration of sepiolite treated with acid (group 3) reduced uranium concentration in liver by a factor
of 2 in comparison with the control group (group 1), while
in kidney and brain uranium concentration decreased by a
factor of 1.4 and 1.2, respectively. In muscle and selected
organs of broilers in groups 0, 4, and 5, uranium could not
be detected (0.001 lg/g). No effects of broilers’ food and
water intake and behavior on uranium concentrations were
observed.
Histopathological changes in broilers contaminated with
a dose of 25 mg 238U daily were found in the kidney, liver,
and small intestine, in the form of dystrophic changes in
the kidney tubules epithelium, edema and vacuolization of
the cytoplasm of hepatocytes, and necrosis of intestinal
villi (Mitrović et al. 2014). In the examined tissues of
broilers that received adsorbent sepiolite after their contamination with uranyl nitrate (group 2), and of broilers
that received only adsorbents sepiolite (group 4), no difference from the normal histological structure could be
observed.
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Table 2 Uranium (lg/g) in muscle and selected tissue of broilers; p values are given to indicate statistical significance in the differences to
group 1
Group (number)
Muscle
Kidney
Uranyl nitrate—control group (1)
0.09 ± 0.03
1.25 ± 0.21
Liver
1.0 ± 0.13
Brain
0.41 ± 0.09
Uranyl nitrate ? S (2)
0.04 ± 0.01**
0.54 ± 0.12***
0.20 ± 0.07***
0.24 ± 0.09*
Uranyl nitrate ? TS (3)
0.07 ± 0.03
0.88 ± 0.23**
0.48 ± 0.06***
0.35 ± 0.11
Data are given as means of six animals in each group and corresponding standard deviation
S natural sepiolite, TS sepiolite treated with acid
* p \ 0.05—significantly; ** p \ 0.01—statistically very significant; *** p \ 0.001—statistically highly significant
In broilers that received sepiolite treated with acid immediately after the contamination of uranium (group 3),
histopathological changes were manifested in the form of
shortening, fragmentation and necrosis of intestinal villi
(Fig. 2), and edema, and abruption of epithelial cells in
renal tubules (Fig. 3). Histopathological changes in the
form of shortening of intestinal villi (Fig. 4) were also
detected in broilers that received only sepiolite treated with
acid (group 4), while changes in the liver, kidneys, and
brain were not observed.
Fig. 2 Intestine from broilers a in zero group (group 0): normal
structure of intestinal villi; HE (hematoxylin and eosin) 9 10
(microscope magnification); b in the experimental group where the
broilers received sepiolite treated with acid and uranyl nitrate (group
3): shortening, fragmentation, and necrosis of intestinal villi (arrow);
HE (hematoxylin and eosin) 9 10 (microscope magnification)
Fig. 3 Renal cortex from broilers a in zero group (group 0):
glomerular and the tubular basement membrane are normal; HE
(hematoxylin and eosin) 9 40 (microscope magnification); b Renal
cortex from broilers in the experimental group where the broilers
received sepiolite treated with acid and uranyl nitrate (group 3):
edema and abruption of epithelial cells in the tubules (arrow); HE
(hematoxylin and eosin) 9 40 (microscope magnification)
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Fig. 4 Shortening of intestinal villi in group that received sepiolite
treated with acid (group 5); HE (hematoxylin and eosin) 9 10
(microscope magnification)
Discussion
Different adsorbents are often used in poultry nutrition, in
order to prevent the absorption of various toxins from the
digestive tract. These additives should be safe for animal
health and should have the ability to bind harmful substances in the digestive tract. Phosphate mineral products
such as dicalcium phosphate and monocalcium phosphate
are important in animal nutrition, as a source of phosphorus
and calcium (Roessler 1990, Arruda-Neto et al. 2005), but
they may be enriched in significant quantities of naturally
occurring radionuclides (Casacuberta et al. 2009), such as
uranium.
In intensive poultry production, there is the possibility
of animal contamination with uranium, using phosphate
mineral products, but the discussion about human health
risk is controversial. Arruda-Neto et al. (1997) reported
that the uranium transfer coefficients from feed supplemented with dicalcium phosphate to animal meat were
1.2 day/kg in chicken and 0.2 day/kg for bovines. These
authors calculated that poultry and bovine meat may accumulate 9 Bq/kg and 25 Bq/kg of 238U and, consequently,
the dose for Brazilian consumers could reach 10 mSv per
year if the contributions of all 238U decay series radionuclides were considered (Arruda-Neto et al. 1997). Opposite
to this, Casacuberta et al. (2009) calculated the dose humans would receive due to the ingestion of poultry meat
based on 210Pb and 210Po, because these two radionuclides
of the 238U decay series mostly contribute to radioactive
exposure after ingestion. These authors estimated the dose
to humans via consumption of chicken meat and found
values between 2 and 11 lSv per year. This does not
suggest any radiological risk to man associated with the
consumption of meat contaminated by radioactivity in dicalcium phosphate fed to the animals.
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The pH value in digestive tract of broilers ranges from
2.5 to 8 (Denbow 2000; Klasing 1999). Therefore, an
in vitro experiment was performed on two initial pH
values, 6 and 3. The results obtained showed that adsorption of uranium ions (VI) on natural sepiolite was
high and fast, both for initial pH values 6 and 3. Donat
(2009) reported that uptake of uranium (VI) ions on natural sepiolite reached the maximum at pH 3 and then
decreased, which is not in accordance with the present
results, probably due to the different structure and surface
properties of these sepiolites. The uptake of uranium (VI)
ions on sepiolite treated with acid was rapid at pH 6. In
contrast, uranium adsorption at pH 3 was lower, but after
four hours of contact, the adsorption had reached more
than 90 % (Fig. 1). The present results also show that the
administration of natural sepiolite and sepiolite treated
with acid to broilers, immediately after uranium administration, will reduce the uranium transfer to tissues and
organs significantly.
After absorption via the digestive tract, uranium is
mostly deposited in bones (ICRP 1996) in humans. Uranium and calcium qualitatively follow the same metabolic
pathway and adult ducks incorporate on average 10 times
more uranium than broilers (Arruda-Neto et al. 2014).
After 7 days of uranium administration, broilers had accumulated uranium in kidney and liver. The uranium
concentration in brain was three times less than that in
kidney, and 2.5 times less than that in liver. In muscle, the
uranium concentration was 14 times lower than in the
kidney, 11 times lower than in the liver, and 4.5 times
lower than in the brain, indicating that muscle is not a
major target for uranium deposition (Mitrović et al. 2014).
No histopathological changes in muscle were observed
after the administration of uranyl nitrate in drinking water
in Sprague–Dawley rats (Gilman et al. 1998a), or in New
Zealand rabbits after 91 days (up to 43 mg U/kg/day)
(Gilman et al. 1998b, c).
After uranium administration to broilers and immediate
protection with natural sepiolite (group 2), uranium concentration in selected organs and muscle was less than
those of the control group (group 1). Application of natural
sepiolite reduced uranium concentration by 57 % in kidney, 80 % in liver, 42 % in brain, and 56 % in muscle
(Table 2). Lower protective effects were observed after the
administration of sepiolite treated with acid (group 3):
Uranium concentration was lower by 30 % in kidney, 52 %
in liver, 15 % in brain, and 22 % in muscle (Table 2). The
efficiency of protection in kidney, liver, and brain was on
average 60 % for sepiolite and 32 % for sepiolite treated
with acid. In our previous study, we reported that the efficiency of protection in kidney, liver, and brain was on
average 60 % for organobentonite and 61 % for organozeolite (Mitrović et al. 2014). Comparing these results with
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those of the present study, it is observed that the highest
protective effect of adsorbents (organobentonite, organozeolite, natural sepiolite, and sepiolite treated with acid)
was in liver (52–80 %), while the lowest protective effect
was in brain (15–49 %). The use of these adsorbents reduced uranium distribution in kidney by 30–67 and
22–67 % in muscle. In addition to this high efficiency of
uranium adsorption, there are various possibilities of sepiolite use in poultry production. For example, it can be
used as a pellet binder for improving pellet quality (Angulo
et al. 1996), growth performances, and feed efficiency
(Ayed et al. 2008). Adding 1.5 % sepiolite in chicken diet
showed a reduction in the intestinal transit time, which
might correspond to a better nutrient utilization (Tortuero
et al. 1992).
After uranium administration to the broilers in the
control group (group 1), histopathological changes were
observed in the small intestine, liver, and kidney (Mitrović et al. 2014). In contrast, in group 2, where the broilers
received natural sepiolite immediately after uranyl nitrate
contamination, no histopathological lesions were observed in the investigated organs and tissues. Accordingly, injuries were also not observed in group 4, where
the broilers received only natural sepiolite. Lesions were
observed in broilers that received sepiolite treated with
acid (groups 3 and 5). In group 5, where broilers received
only sepiolite treated with acid without contamination
with uranyl nitrate administration, shortening of intestinal
villi was observed. Significant damage of intestinal villi in
the form of necrosis, fragmentation and shortening, and
histopathological lesions on kidney in the form of edema
and abruption of epithelial cells in tubules was observed
in group 3 (uranyl nitrate ? TS). The uranium concentration in kidneys of broilers in group 3 (uranyl nitrate ? TS), where histopathological changes were
detected, was greater (0.88 lg/g) than that in kidneys
from group 2 (uranyl nitrate ? S). In rats that received
small doses of uranyl fluoride, changes in kidneys such as
necrosis of the proximal tubules, as well as proteinuria
and enzimuria, were found at low concentrations of uranium from 0.7 to 1.4 lg/g fresh weight of kidney (Diamond et al. 1989), while a much more serious renal
impairment was observed when concentrations in kidneys
were 3.4 and 5.6 lg/g of fresh weight. The changes observed in the small intestine in group 3 are not associated
with the toxic effects of uranium, because in broilers that
received only sepiolite treated with acid, the shortening of
the small intestine was also observed (group 5). These
changes are probably caused by the HCl, which was used
for sepiolite activation. Histopathological changes observed in kidneys are the result of their physiological
ability to reabsorb and accumulate divalent metals (Vicente–Vicente et al. 2010; Kurttio et al. 2002). In rats,
uranium specifically accumulates in the proximal tubules
in the inner cortex and the outer stripe of the outer
medulla, where it causes apoptosis and renal lesions
(Homma-Takeda et al. 2009). Studies of overexposure in
experimental animals (rats and rabbits) showed a chronic
nephrotoxicity after a short-term high dose of uranium
administered via drinking water (Gilman et al. 1998a, b).
Conclusion
With the actual increase in uranium accumulation in the
environment due to huge uranium production for nuclear
and nonnuclear purposes, it is useful to understand its
distribution and toxicity for humans and animals, and its
potential to enter the human food chain. The results obtained in the present study show that uranium has enterotoxic effects on the intestinal villi. Target organs for
uranium accumulation are kidneys and liver, where
histopathological changes were also observed. Uranium
transfer in muscle was low, indicating that muscles are not
a target tissue for uranium. The efficiency of protection in
kidney, liver, and brain for sepiolite and organobentonite
was on average 60, and 61 % for organozeolite. In all
situations where there is a risk of contamination by uranium either through phosphate mineral additives or water,
adding sepiolite, organobentonite, and organozeolite as
mineral adsorbents to animal feed prevents enterotoxic
effects on intestine and reduces uranium transfer in organs
and tissue.
Acknowledgments This work was supported by the Ministry of
Education, Science and Technological Development of Serbia, in the
frame of Innovation Project No. 451-03-2802/2013-16/160 and Projects No. TR 31003 and TR 34013.
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