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Positive association between serum silicon levels and bone mineral density in female rats following oral silicon supplementation with monomethylsilanetriol.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Jugdaohsingh, Ravin  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8074-2992
Watson, AIE 
Bhattacharya, P 
van Lenthe, GH 
Powell, JJ 

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Observational (epidemiological) studies suggest the positive association between dietary silicon intake and bone mineral density may be mediated by circulating estradiol level. Here, we report the results of a silicon supplementation study in rats that strongly support these observations and suggest an interaction between silicon and estradiol. INTRODUCTION: Epidemiological studies report strong positive associations between dietary silicon (Si) intake and bone mineral density (BMD) in premenopausal women and indicate that the association may be mediated by estradiol. We have tested this possibility in a mixed-gender rodent intervention study. METHODS: Tissue samples were obtained from three groups of 20-week-old Sprague Dawley rats (five males and five females per group) that had been supplemented ad libitum for 90 days in their drinking water with (i) <0.1 mg Si/L (vehicle control), (ii) 115 mg Si/L (moderate dose) or (iii) 575 mg Si/L (high dose). All rats received conventional laboratory feed, whilst supplemental Si was in the form of monomethylsilanetriol, increasing dietary Si intakes by 18 and 99 %, for the moderate- and high-dose groups, respectively. RESULTS: Fasting serum and tissue Si concentrations were increased with Si supplementation (p < 0.05), regardless of gender. However, only for female rats was there (i) a trend for a dose-responsive increase in serum osteocalcin concentration with Si intervention and (ii) strong significant associations between serum Si concentrations and measures of bone quality (p < 0.01). Correlations were weaker or insignificant for tibia Si levels and absent for other serum or tibia elemental concentrations and bone quality measures. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support the epidemiological observations that dietary Si positively impacts BMD in younger females, and this may be due to a Si-estradiol interaction. Moreover, these data suggest that the Si effect is mediated systemically, rather than through its incorporation into bone.

Description

Keywords

Administration, Oral, Animals, Body Weight, Bone Density, Dietary Supplements, Estradiol, Female, Male, Organosilicon Compounds, Osteocalcin, Silicon, Tibia

Journal Title

Osteoporos Int

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0937-941X
1433-2965

Volume Title

26

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC