Veterinarian Approved Content
This content has been prepared by Doç. Dr. Mehmet ÇOLAK based on scientific sources.
Ingredient Encyclopedia

Selenium in Pet Food: Glutathione Peroxidase, Thyroid Function, and Toxicity Risk

Doç. Dr. Mehmet ÇOLAK 18 February 2026 111 views

Selenium is an essential trace mineral in pet food for antioxidant defense and thyroid support. This guide explains GPx, forms, and toxicity risk.


Selenium (Se) is an essential trace mineral that is critical for antioxidant defense, thyroid function, immune health and reproductive performance. Selenium is located in the active center of glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and helps protect cells from oxidative damage. It works synergistically with Vitamin E; both prevent lipid peroxidation. However, selenium has a narrow therapeutic window; excess intake can be as dangerous as deficiency.

ID Card
Chemical SymbolSe
Resource TypeTrace Mineral (Essential)
FunctionAntioxidant (GPx) / Thyroid / Immune / Reproductive
Dog Need0.35 mg/kg DM (AAFCO min.)
Cat Needs0.30 mg/kg DM (AAFCO min.)
Safe Upper LimitDog: 2 mg/kg DM, Cat: 2 mg/kg DM (NRC)
Common FormSodium selenite, selenium yeast (organic)
Discussion Levelmedium
VetKriter Evaluation
4/5 Quality Score

Selenium is an essential and clinically important trace mineral. It is indispensable for antioxidant defense and normal thyroid function. The organic form, such as selenium yeast, generally has higher bioavailability than inorganic forms like sodium selenite. Careful dosing is important because of selenium's narrow therapeutic window.

Why Added?

  • Antioxidant: Cofactor of the enzyme glutathione peroxidase (GPx) — neutralizes hydrogen peroxide and lipid peroxides
  • Thyroid function: Type I deiodinase enzyme is selenium dependent (T4 → T3 conversion)
  • Immune support: Increases NK cell activity and antibody production
  • Vitamin E synergy: Both prevent lipid peroxidation by different mechanisms
Selenosis (Selenium Toxicity)

selenium The therapeutic window is very narrow. Chronic excessive intake (>2 mg/kg DM) selenosis may cause: hair/feather loss, nail deformation, GI symptoms, neurological findings and liver damage. Acute selenium poisoning can be fatal. Additional selenium supplementation should never be given without veterinary supervision. The amount of selenium in food is safe within the limits of AAFCO/NRC.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between organic selenium and inorganic selenium?

Inorganic selenium (sodium selenite) is cheap and common but has lower bioavailability and can be toxic in narrow doses. Organic selenium (selenium yeast — selenomethionine) has higher bioavailability, can be stored in tissues and is safer. Organic selenium form is preferred in premium foods.

Related VetKriter Tools

Bibliography
  1. NRC (National Research Council). (2006). Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. National Academies Press.
  2. AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials). (2024). Official Publication.
  3. Todd, S.E. et al. (2012). Selenium supplementation in dogs and cats. New Zealand Veterinary Journal, 60(6), 334-340.
Tags: selenium GPx antioxidant thyroid selenosis organic form vitamin e

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