Abstract

The effects of menatetrenone (2-methyl-3-tetraprenyl-1,4-naphthoquinone, MK-4) on calcium balance were studied in male Sprague-Dawley rats. Experiment 1: Rats in metabolic cages that were fed a vitamin K-deficient diet and injected daily with latamoxef (100 mg/kg, i.p.) were either treated or untreated with MK-4 for 7 days. Daily food intake, urine volume and feces weight were determined, and calcium concentration in these samples was measured. Calcium balance was calculated as the difference between calcium intake and urinary and fecal calcium excretion. Cumulative calcium balance in the vitamin K-deficient group treated with latamoxef was lower than that in normal rats; this balance was significantly improved by MK-4 (1 and 10 mg/kg, s.c.) administered for 7 days. Experiment 2: Rats were fed a vitamin K-deficient diet containing 4.6% sodium chloride for 6 weeks. MK-4 was administered as a dietary supplement. Forty-eight-hour calcium balance, determined once a week, was significantly reduced compared with that of normal rats after 3 and 5 weeks; the balance was restored dose-dependently by MK-4 administration (1 and 10 mg/kg). Experiment 3: Rats were subjected to the same experimental conditions as experiment 2 for 6 weeks, and intestinal calcium transport was determined using an everted gut-sac technique. Calcium transport was reduced by the high sodium, vitamin K-deficient diet, and this reduction was restored by MK-4 administration (10 mg/kg). These results suggest that MK-4 improves the reduced calcium balance by increasing intestinal calcium absorption in these rats.

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