Investigations were carried out to establish the total biopotency of the natural
vitamin E isomers in barley compared with that of DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate. The chick was used as an experimental animal. Prevention of nutritional
encephalomalacia (NE) and chick liver-storage and plasma-storage assays of
vitamin E were the methods used in the study. The individual
tocopherols and
tocotrienols, both in the tissue samples and in the grain and
barley oil, were analysed using high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorescence detection. The diagnosis of NE was based on careful clinical and histopathological observations. It can be concluded from the results that full protection against NE in the chicks was obtained with a supplementation level of 7.5 mg DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate/kg diet (i.e. a total
vitamin E content of 11.20 mg/kg diet) or with a supplement of 8.7 g
barley oil/kg diet (i.e. a total
vitamin E content of 22.99 mg from
barley oil/kg diet). This gave a biopotency factor of 0.49 for barley for prevention of NE of the chicks, as compared to that of DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate. Using regression analysis a statistically linear relationship could be observed between the total dietary
vitamin E level and the response, as measured by the total
vitamin E content in the liver and plasma, both in the groups supplemented with DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate and in the groups supplemented with corresponding amounts of
vitamin E in
barley oil. The liver and plasma responses to the total
vitamin E in the
barley-oil diet compared with those of the DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate reference diet gave identical values for the regression coefficients, i.e. in both liver-storage and plasma-storage assays the value for slopes of dose-response lines was 0.37. This means that the biopotency of the total
vitamin E in barley was 37% of that of dietary DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate. Thus, barley is not as rich a source of
vitamin E as could be supposed on the basis of the chemical determination of its total
vitamin E content. It was possible to verify this experimentally established biopotency of 0.37 for the total
vitamin E in barley by converting the chemically determined amounts of the
vitamin E isomers in barley into DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate equivalents by multiplying them with internationally accepted potency factors for the individual natural isomers (DL-alpha-
tocopheryl acetate 1.00,
D-alpha-tocopherol 1.49, D-
beta-tocopherol 0.60, D-
gamma-tocopherol 0.15, D-
alpha-tocotrienol 0.37).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)