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1.
The present study was undertaken to measure the activities of several hepatic enzymes of regulatory importance in the pathways of lipogenesis and gluconeogenesis in rats fed diets marginally deficient in copper (1.2 micrograms Cu/g of diet) and containing either fructose, glucose, or starch as the carbohydrate sources. Although all copper-deficient rats exhibited the characteristic signs of copper deficiency, they were more pronounced in rats fed the diet containing fructose. Except for the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase which was unaffected either by copper deficiency or by the type of dietary carbohydrate, the hepatic activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, L-alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and fructose 1,6-diphosphatase were unaffected by copper deficiency but were affected by the type of carbohydrate in the diet. Fructose produced the greatest increase in enzymatic activities, whereas starch produced the least activity and glucose induced an intermediate effect. These results indicate that the deleterious effects of a fructose diet deficient in copper on biochemical and physiological indices could not be due to an immediate metabolite of fructose. However, the involvement of a subsequent metabolite of fructose in the mechanism of copper utilization and/or requirement cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of the interactions between dietary carbohydrates and copper deficiency on superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activities and their roles in peroxidative pathways were investigated. Weanling rats were fed diets deficient in copper and containing either 62% starch, fructose, or glucose. Decreased activity of SOD was noted in all rats fed the copper-deficient diets regardless of the nature of dietary carbohydrate. However, the decreased activity was more pronouced in rats fed fructose. Feeding the fructose diets decreased the activity of GSH-Px by 25 and 50% in the copper-supplemented and copper-deficient rats, respectively, compared to enzyme activities in rats fed similar diets containing either starch or glucose. The decreased SOD and GSH-Px activities in rats fed the fructose diet deficient in copper were associated with increased tissue per-oxidation and decreased hepatic adenosine triphosphate (ATP). When the fructose in the diet of copper-deficient rats was replaced with either starch or glucose, tissue SOD and GSH-Px activities were increased and these increases in enzyme activity were associated with a tendency toward reduced mitochondrial peroxidation when compared to the corre-sponding values for rats fed fructose throughout the experiment Dietary fructose aggrevated the symptoms associated with copper deficiency, but starch or glucose ameliorated them. The protective effects were more pronounced with starch than with glucose.  相似文献   

3.
Copper deficiency was induced in weanling rats fed diets whose sole source of carbohydrates was starch or fructose for 7 weeks. Conventional parameters of copper status, plasma copper concentrations, ceruloplasmin activity, and erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity were longitudinally monitored weekly to follow the development of the deficiency and to correlate these indices with the degree of severity of the deficiency. Although 30% of the rats fed a copper-deficient fructose diet died and no deaths occurred in rats fed the copper-deficient starch diet, plasma copper, ceruloplasmin, and SOD activities were reduced to a similar extent in all rats fed copper-deficient diets regardless of the type of dietary carbohydrate. Thus, none of the indices used accurately reflected the greater degree of deficiency or mortality in rats fed the fructose diet deficient in copper. The results of the present study underscore the need for more sensitive tests or alternative parameters to assess copper status in living animals.  相似文献   

4.
The purpose of this study was to determine what levels of starch or glucose replacement for fructose in the copper-deficient diet (copper) can minimize the fructose-copper interaction. Experimental diets contained either 100% fructose as the carbohydrate source, or the fructose was partially replaced with 50% starch, 50% glucose, 75% starch, or 75% glucose. Diets were either copper adequate (7-8 ppm) or inadequate (less than 1 ppm). Male weanling rats were fed their respective diet for 5 weeks and then fasted overnight. After decapitation, blood was collected and liver and heart were removed. Plasma copper was significantly reduced and ceruloplasmin was not detected in all copper-deficient groups. Copper deficiency increased plasma cholesterol, as well as heart and liver weight in the glucose groups, but not in the starch groups. Those organ weights were heavier in glucose-copper than starch-copper rats. Erythrocyte copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase activity was greater in starch-copper rats. Erythrocyte copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase activity was greater in starch-copper than glucose-copper rats regardless of carbohydrate amount. Hepatic copper concentration of the group fed starch-copper was twice levels observed in glucose-copper. The 50% glucose rats had lower hepatic copper than the 75% glucose rats. Hepatic copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase activity showed patterns similar to hepatic copper. Cardiac copper was greater in starch-copper than glucose-copper rats. Cardiac copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase activity was equally reduced in all copper-deficient groups. The 50% starch-replaced diet was more effective in minimizing copper deficiency than the 75% glucose-replaced diet. This poorer improvement of copper deficiency by glucose than starch may partially be due to a more severe reduction of food intake in glucose than in starch diets.  相似文献   

5.
Experiments were conducted in copper deficient male and female rats fed diets containing fructose or starch in order to determine whether the same type of interaction between copper status and dietary carbohydrate found in male rats also occurs in the female rat. Mortality occurred only in the male rats fed the fructose diet deficient in copper with 40% of the animals dying during the 8 week study. Only anemia, hypercholesterolemia, increased BUN, heart hypertrophy and reduced body weight were observed in these animals which could be related to their mortality. Despite the increased mortality, plasma ceruloplasmin, erythrocyte SOD and hepatic copper concentrations were reduced to a similar extent in all rats regardless of the sex of the animals or of the type of dietary carbohydrate fed. The results of the present study indicate that although direct measurements of copper status of female rats fed fructose diet deficient in copper are similar to their male counterpart, they are apparently protected from the lethal consequences of the deficiency.  相似文献   

6.
This study was conducted to determine the effects of nutrient interactions between dietary carbohydrates and copper levels on fructose-metabolizing hepatic enzymes in male and female rats. Male and female rats were fed diets for 5 weeks that were either adequate or deficient in copper that contained either starch or fructose. Rats of both sexes fed fructose as compared with those fed starch showed higher activity of hepatic fructose metabolizing enzymes. There were also significant differences in fructose metabolism of liver between the male and female rats. Female rats had lower hepatic ketohexokinase and triose kinase but higher triosephosphate isomerase activities compared with male rats. Male rats fed copper-deficient diets had lower aldolase B activity compared with those fed copper-adequate diets. Female rats fed copper-deficient diets had higher triosephosphate isomerase activity compared with rats fed copper-adequate diets. Our data suggest that gender differences in hepatic fructose metabolism may not be the primary reason for the severity of copper deficiency syndrome in male rats fed copper-deficient diet with fructose.  相似文献   

7.
Inadequate dietary copper is known to result in undesirable metabolic changes in rats and humans. Abnormal cardiac function, leading to sudden death, is a common finding when copper deficient rats are fed a 62% fructose diet. To further study the apparent mineral-carbohydrate relationship to cardiac physiology, 3 male and 3 female swine were randomly assigned to four groups (6 pigs per group) which were fed low copper (1.5 ppm) or copper supplemented (40 ppm) diets with 20% of calories from either fructose or glucose for 10 weeks. In agreement with results from other animal studies, copper deficient swine exhibited decreased plasma ceruloplasmin, erythrocyte superoxide dismutase and plasma lysyl oxidase activities and lowered serum copper. The copper deficient fructose group had the lowest aortic lysyl oxidase activity and hematocrit when compared to the other groups. The relative heart weight in the copper deficient fructose group was 93% greater than the other three dietary groups. The livers of copper deficient fructose fed pigs were also significantly larger. Two enzymes related to cardiac and hepatic function, aspartate and alanine aminotransferase were also measured. Copper deficiency significantly lowered alanine aminotransferase but there was no dietary effect on aspartate amino-transferase. The results of this project indicate that the pig is a sensitive model for the study of cardiovascular abnormalities which occur when fructose is consumed with a low copper diet.  相似文献   

8.
Fructose and copper have been shown independently to influence long chain fatty acid metabolism. Since fructose feeding exacerbates copper deficiency, their possible interaction with respect to tissue long chain fatty acid and lipid composition was studied. Weanling male Sprague-Dawley rats were given diets containing 0.6 or 6 mg/kg copper. The carbohydrate source (627 g/kg) was either fructose or corn starch. After 3 wk, fatty acid profiles and total lipids in heart and liver were analyzed. Copper-deficient rats fed fructose had more severe signs of copper deficiency than those fed starch, according to heart/body wt ratio, hematocrit, and liver copper content. The fatty acid composition of heart and liver triacylglycerol was significantly different between groups, but the changes did not correlate with the severity of copper deficiency. In heart, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine, arachidonic acid and docosapentaenoic acid (n-6) were increased 193 and 217%, respectively, p<0.05) in rats given the copper-deficient diet containing fructose. Changes in the long chain fatty acids in heart phospholipids may be related to the higher mortality commonly observed in rats fed a copper-deficient diet containing fructose.  相似文献   

9.
The present investigation was designed to study the uptake of67Cu when administered directly, into the portal vein, along with either functose or glucose, by the liver and extrahepatic tissues. Following weaning, male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed for 3 wk either commercial laboratory ration (chow) or semipurified diets deficient in Cu (0.6 ppm) or supplemented with Cu (6.0 ppm) and containing 62% carbohydrate as either fructuse or cornstarch. After an overnight fast, a single dose of rat plasma (0.1 mL) containing fructose or glucose extrinsically labeled with67Cu was injected directly into their portal vein. Although not always statistically significant, rats fed chow retained more radioactivity in the liver and several extrahepatic tissues when67Cu was administered with fructose than with glucose. Regardless of Cu status, rats fed diets containing fructose retained more radioactivity in extrahepatic tissues than rats fed starch. There was an increased uptake of67Cu by the liver, blood, muscle, and fat pad when fructose as compared to glucose was injected in combination with the isotope. These data strongly suggest that Cu requirements or utilization are greater when fructose is the main dietary carbohydrate. The results may also in part explain the reason for the increased severity of Cu deficiency in rats fed fructose.  相似文献   

10.
Rats were fed diets containing starch, sucrose, glucose, or fructose as the carbohydrate source, and the influence of these carbohydrates on copper, iron, and zinc status was determined. It was found that copper absorption was reduced in animals receiving glucose. This reduction was exaggerated when a high level of iron was present in the diet, indicating a possible antagonism between iron and copper at the site of absorption. Iron and zinc status of the animals also appeared to be influenced to some extent by dietary carbohydrate.  相似文献   

11.
1. Male rats were fed for 14 days on powdered diets containing (by weight) 53% of starch, or on diets in which 20g of starch per 100g of diet was replaced by lard or corn oil. They were then fed acutely by stomach tube with a single dose of glucose, fructose or ethanol of equivalent energy contents, or with 0.15m-NaCl. The serum concentrations of corticosterone, insulin, glucose, glycerol, triacylglycerol and cholesterol were measured up to 6h after this treatment. 2. Feeding saline (0.9% NaCl) acutely to the rats maintained on the three powdered diets produced a small transient increase in circulating corticosterone that was similar to that in rats maintained on the normal 41B pelleted diet. 3. Feeding glucose acutely to the rats on the powdered diets produced peak concentrations of corticosterone that were 2–3-fold higher than those seen in rats maintained on the 41B diet. The duration of this response increased in the order starch diet<lard diet<corn-oil diet. This abnormal corticosterone response to glucose feeding appeared to be responsible for an increased activity in phosphatidate phosphohydrolase in the livers of rats fed the starch and lard diets of 2.9- and 4.9-fold respectively. The latter increase was similar to that produced by ethanol, whereas glucose did not increase the phosphohydrolase activity in the liver of rats maintained on the 41B diet. 4. Feeding fructose acutely produced even more marked increases than glucose in the concentrations of circulating corticosterone in rats given the powdered diets, but unlike glucose did not increase circulating insulin. The duration of the corticosterone response again increased in the order starch diet<lard diet<corn-oil diet. The concentrations of circulating glucose were increased by fructose feeding in rats maintained on these diets, but they were not altered in the rats maintained on the 41B pellets. A prolonged increase in serum corticosterone concentrations was also observed when fructose was fed to rats maintained on pelleted diets enriched with corn oil or beef tallow rather than with starch or sucrose. However, these effects were less marked than those seen with rats fed on the powdered diets. 5. These results are discussed in relation to the mechanism whereby high dietary fat exaggerates the effects of ethanol, fructose and sorbitol in stimulating triacylglycerol synthesis in the liver.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of the study was to assess the influence of dietary iron content on lipid and carbohydrate metabolism and on zinc and copper status in rats fed with a diet high in fat, fructose, and salt. Wistar rats were fed with diets high in fat, fructose, and salt, containing differing amounts of iron, namely, deficit, normal, and high levels. After 6 weeks, the animals were weighed and killed. The liver, heart, and pancreas were collected, as were blood samples. The total cholesterol, triglycerides, fasting glucose, and insulin levels in the serum were measured. The iron, zinc, and copper concentrations in tissues and serum were determined. It was found that in rats fed with the iron-deficit diet, cholesterol and glucose profiles improved. Both deficit and excess iron in the diet decreased insulin concentration in rats and disturbed iron, zinc, and copper status. High-iron level in the diet decreased the relative mass of the pancreas. In conclusion, the decrease in serum insulin concentration observed in rats fed with the modified diet high in iron was associated with iron and copper status disorders, and also, with a relatively diminished pancreas mass. A deficit of iron in the diet improved lipid and carbohydrate metabolism in rats.  相似文献   

13.
Carbohydrates (CHO) such as fructose (FR) or sucrose, but not starch (ST), aggravate the consequences of dietary copper (Cu) deficiency in rats. To evaluate whether this Cu X CHO interaction is pertinent to human health, the pig was used as an animal model. In two studies, 66 weanling pigs were fed dried skim milk (DSM)-based diets for 10 wk with 20% of the total calories provided as either FR, glucose, or ST and containing either deficient (1.0-1.3 micrograms/g diet) or adequate (7.1 micrograms/g) levels of Cu. Plasma and tissue levels of Cu, the activities of plasma ceruloplasmin ferroxidase and erythrocyte Cu, Zn-superoxide dismutase, and hematocrits were lower (p less than 0.05) in animals fed Cu-deficient diets. The relative cardiac mass of all Cu-deficient groups was greater (p less than 0.05) than that of animals fed Cu-adequate diets. These effects were in general unaffected by type of CHO. For comparison, weaned male rats were also fed DSM-based containing diets ST or FR with adequate or deficient Cu for as long as 10 wk. Rats consuming the Cu-deficient diets were characterized by significantly lower hematocrits, decreased tissue Cu levels, and enlarged hearts, regardless of the CHO source. Together, these data demonstrate that DSM-based diets are not suitable for delineation of potential Cu X CHO interactions, and one or more components of DSM may exacerbate the consequences of dietary Cu deficiency.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of dietary tin on copper status and on enzymes and metabolites involved in hepatocellular antioxidant protection were measured in rats fed copper-adequate or copper-deficient diets with glucose or fructose. Rats became copper-depleted after 4 weeks on diets containing less than 0.5 micrograms of copper/g as evidenced by significant decreases in liver copper and serum ceruloplasmin. Signs of copper deficiency occurred in copper-depleted rats fed diets containing 100 micrograms of tin/g. Significant effects of tin on liver glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase activities and on liver iron and total glutathione concentrations were observed. Interactions between copper and tin on liver copper and iron and on liver superoxide dismutase and malondialdehyde production are reported. Adverse effects of feeding diets containing 100 micrograms of tin/g include (i) copper depletion in rats fed copper-adequate diets, (ii) accelerated development of copper deficiency in rats fed copper-deficient diets, and (iii) reduction in hepatocellular antioxidant protection.  相似文献   

15.
This study was designed to examine the relationship between the fructose-copper interaction and tissue sorbitol concentrations. Weanling male rats were provided with a diet which contained 62.7% fructose and 0.6 microg copper/g (F-Cu) for 4 weeks. At this time, rats were changed to either a fructose diet which contained 6.0 microg copper/g or to a starch diet with or without copper for 2 weeks. When compared with the other dietary groups, it was found that rats fed the F-Cu diet grew poorly; had altered relative liver, pancreatic, heart, and kidney sizes; were anemic; and had higher tissue concentrations of pancreatic and heart glucose, liver, pancreatic, heart, and kidney fructose, and liver, pancreatic, and kidney sorbitol. When rats were changed from the F-Cu diet to one containing copper or to a starch diet with or without copper, weight gain, relative liver, pancreatic and heart sizes, and hematocrit improved significantly. In general, there was a reduction in pancreatic and heart glucose; liver, pancreatic, heart, and kidney fructose; and pancreatic and kidney sorbitol concentrations when rats were changed from the F-Cu diet to any of the other diets. We conclude that the fructose-copper interaction may have a common biochemical basis related to the metabolism of glucose, fructose, and sorbitol.  相似文献   

16.
Dietary copper deficiency is known to adversely affect the circulatory system of fructose-fed rats. Part of the problem may lie in the effect of copper deficiency on intermediary metabolism. To test this, weanling male Long-Evans rats were fed for 4 or 8 weeks on sucrose-based diets containing low or adequate copper content. Copper deficient rats had significantly lower plasma and tissue copper as well as lower plasma copper, zinc-superoxide dismutase activity. Copper deficient rats also had a significantly higher heart:body weight ratio when compared to pair-fed controls. Direct measurement of glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway flux in erythrocytes using (13)C NMR showed no differences in carbon flux from glucose or fructose to pyruvate but a significantly higher flux through the lactate dehydrogenase locus in copper deficient rats (approximately 1.3 times, average of glucose and glucose + fructose measurements). Copper-deficient animals had significantly higher erythrocyte concentrations of glucose, fructose, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and NAD(+). Liver metabolite levels were also affected by copper deficiency being elevated in glycogen and fructose 1-phosphate content. The results show small changes in carbohydrate metabolism of copper deficient rats.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of dietary sucrose, fructose and glucose on the intestinal absorption of fructose and glucose was investigated in adult rats in vivo: Glucose absorption was not affected by the type of dietary carbohydrate, while the absorption of fructose was increased by the ingestion of the sucrose or fructose diet, as compared with the glucose diet. An almost maximal increase of fructose absorption was already observed when the quarter of the total dietary carbohydrates was replaced by fructose. Faecal fructose elimination declined during the feeding experiment. The enhanced intestinal absorption of the fructose load in rats fed the fructose diet was manifested by higher concentrations of fructose, but also of glucose and lactate in the hepatic portal blood.  相似文献   

18.
The present study was performed to investigate the effect of zinc deficiency on the activities of lipoprotein lipase in postheparin serum and tissues of rats fed diets containing either coconut oil or fish oil as dietary fat, using a bifactorial experimental design. To ensure an adequate food intake, all the rats were force-fed by gastric tube. Experimental diets contained either 0.8 mg zinc/kg (zinc-deficient diets) or 40 mg zinc/kg (zinc-adequate diets). The effects of zinc deficiency on the activities of lipoprotein lipase in postheparin serum and postprandial triglyceride concentrations and distribution of apolipoproteins in serum lipoproteins depended on the type of dietary fat. Zinc-deficient rats fed the coconut oil diet exhibited a reduced activity of lipoprotein lipase in postheparin serum and adipose tissue, markedly increased concentrations of triglycerides in serum, and a markedly reduced content of apolipoprotein C in triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and high density lipoproteins compared with zinc-adequate rats fed coconut oil. By contrast, zinc-deficient rats fed the fish oil diet did not exhibit reduced activities of lipoprotein lipase in postheparin serum and adipose tissue and increased concentrations of serum lipids compared with zinc-adequate rats fed the fish oil diet. This study suggests that a reduced activity of lipoprotein lipase might contribute to increased postprandial concentrations of serum triglycerides observed in zinc-deficient animals. However, it also demonstrates that the effects of zinc deficiency on lipoprotein metabolism are influenced by dietary fatty acids.  相似文献   

19.
The hypothesis was tested that dietary fructose vs glucose lowers copper solubility in the digesta in the small intestine of rats, which in turn causes a decreased copper absorption. Male rats were fed adequate-copper (5 mg Cu/kg) diets containing either fructose or glucose (709.4 g monosaccharide/kg) for a period of 5 wk. Fructose vs glucose significantly lowered copper concentrations in plasma and the liver, but did not alter hepatic copper mass. Fructose feeding resulted in a significantly lesser intestinal solubility of copper as based on either a smaller soluble fraction of copper in the liquid phase of small intestinal contents or a lower copper concentration in the liquid phase. The latter fructose effect can be explained by the observed fructose-induced increase in volume of liquid phase of intestinal digesta. After administration of a restricted amount of diet extrinsically labeled with64Cu, rats fed fructose also had significantly lower soluble64Cu fraction in the digesta of the small intestine. Although this study shows that fructose lowered intestinal copper solubility, only a slight reduction of apparent copper absorption was observed. It is suggested that the fructose-induced lowering of copper status in part counteracted the fructose effect on copper absorption at the level of the intestinal lumen.  相似文献   

20.
Eight groups of 13-15 female rats were fed purified diets after littering. Four groups received a low protein (8% casein) diet (groups 8) and the others, a normal protein (20% casein) diet (groups 20). Carbohydrates were supplied either as starch (groups S) or as starch plus 40% fructose (groups F). Half the animals received a 0.4% methionine supplementation (groups M). Four or five dams per group were sacrificed on days 2, 7 and 14 after littering. The diet intake was increased by methionine supplementation, substitution of starch for fructose and increased protein content, mainly during the second week of lactation. This influenced weight variation of the dams and litter growth. On all days, the plasma levels of cholesterol esters, triglycerides and phospholipids were positively correlated with the dietary protein level. On days 7 and 14, the liver neutral lipid content was increased in rats fed the low protein diets supplemented with methionine (groups 8SM and 8FM) and the normal protein diets containing 40% fructose (groups 20F and 20FM). The plasma free threonine content was positively correlated with the protein level in the diet. On day 14, rats fed a low protein diet had a threonine deficiency, except those in groups 8S and 8F. The plasma free threonine content of these rats was not reduced, possibly due to an impaired utilization of this amino acid. The liver lipidosis observed during lactation, in contrast to that observed during growth with a low protein diet, was not due to a threonine deficiency.  相似文献   

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