3 research outputs found
A 90-day Feeding Toxicity Study of l-Serine in Male and Female Fischer 344 Rats
A subchronic feeding study of l-serine (l-Ser) was conducted with groups of 10
male and 10 female Fischer 344 rats fed a powder diet containing 0, 0.06, 0.5,
1.5 or 5.0% concentrations of l-Ser for 90 days. There were no toxicologically
significant, treatment-related changes with regards to body weight, food intake,
water intake or urinalysis data. In several of the hematology, serum
biochemistry and organ weight parameters, significant changes were observed
between some of the treated groups and the controls. All these changes, however,
were subtle and lacked any corresponding pathological findings. In addition, the
increased or decreased values remained within the range of the historical
control values. In fact, histopathological assessment revealed only sporadic
and/or spontaneous lesions. In conclusion, the no-observed-adverse-effect-level
(NOAEL) for l-Ser was, therefore, determined to be at least a dietary dose of
5.0% (2765.0 mg/kg body weight/day for males and 2905.1 mg/kg body weight/day
for females) under the present experimental conditions