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1.
Zinc and iron are crucial mineral components of human diet, because their deficiency leads to several disorders, including alterations of the immune function. It has been demonstrated, in both humans and rodents, that a diminished number of lymphoid cells and a loss of lymphocyte activity accompany deprivation of these essential minerals. The aim of this work was to analyze if iron and/or zinc imbalances regulate lymphocyte activity and the intracellular signals involved in the effect. Mice from the BALB/c strain were fed with iron- and/or zinc-deficient or mineral-supplemented diets, according to the American Institute of Nutrition Rodent Diets. Levels of iron and zinc were assessed in blood, liver, or bone samples. Selective mitogen stimulation of T- and B-lymphocytes were performed. We found a diminished proliferative response in T- and B-lymphocytes from zinc- and/or iron-deficient animals with respect to controls. These effects were related to decreased mitogen-induced translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) activity to cell membranes on both cell types from all animals fed with deficient diets. Our results demonstrate that iron and zinc deficiencies affect both T- and B-lymphocyte function by PKC-dependent mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
Iron deficiency is a common nutritional disorder, affecting about 30% of the world population. Deficits in iron functional compartments have suppressive effects on the immune system. Environmental problems, age, and other nutrient deficiencies are some of the situations which make human studies difficult and warrant the use of animal models. This study aimed to investigate alterations in the immune system by inducing iron deficiency and promoting recuperation in a mouse model. Hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, liver iron store, and flow cytometry analyses of cell-surface transferrin receptor (CD71) on peripheral blood and spleen CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocyte were performed in the control (C) and the iron-deficient (ID) groups of animals at the beginning and end of the experiment. Hematological indices of C and ID mice were not different but the iron stores of ID mice were significantly reduced. Although T cell subsets were not altered, the percentage of T cells expressing CD71 was significantly increased by ID. The results suggest that iron deficiency induced by our experimental model would mimic the early events in the onset of anemia, where thymus atrophy is not enough to influence subset composition of T cells, which can still respond to iron deficiency by upregulating the expression of transferrin receptor.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of iron deficiency and iron overloading on the mitochondrial enzymes involved in heme synthesis were studied in rat livers. The in vitro activities of several of the enzymes in this pathway were differentially influenced by the in vivo iron status of the animals. delta-Aminolevulinic acid synthase was slightly increased in iron-overloaded animals, but remained normal in iron-deficient animals (0.58 +/- 0.09, 0.91 +/- 0.19 and 0.61 +/- 0.12 nmol delta-aminolevulinic acid/mg per h). Copro- and protoporphyrinogen oxidase activities were increased (20 and 60% above controls) in iron-deficient animals. In contrast, coproporphyrinogen oxidase was decreased by 20%, while protoporphyrinogen oxidase remained unchanged in iron-overloaded rats. These variations of activities were not due to changes in the affinity of these enzymes toward their substrates, as coporphyrinogen had the same Km in each case (0.62 +/- 0.05 M) as did protoporphyrinogen (0.22 +/- 0.035 M). Thus, the Km did not vary with the treatment received by the animals. Ferrochelatase activity was measured by both the pyridine hemochromogen method and by measurement of zinc protoporphyrin with endogenous zinc as substrate. In all cases, ferrochelatase was found to be able to synthesize zinc protoporphyrin with endogenous zinc as substrate. However, the apparent Km of zinc chelatase for protoporphyrin was significantly different in the three groups of animals with Km,appProto, app = 2.4 +/- 0.1 10(-7), 4 +/- 0.3 10(-7) and 9.10 +/- 0.05 10(-7) M in iron-overloaded, control and iron-deficient animals, respectively. When ferrochelatase activity was measured by pyridine hemochromogen, identical results were observed in iron-deficient and control animals but decreased by 45% in iron-overloaded animals. The mitochondrial heme content was also decreased by 40% in iron-overloaded rats but unchanged in either iron-deficient or control rats.  相似文献   

4.
The liver peptide hepcidin regulates body iron, is upregulated in iron overload and inflammation, and is downregulated in iron deficiency/hypoxia. The transmembrane serine protease matriptase-2 (TMPRSS6) inhibits the hepcidin response and its mutational inactivation causes iron-deficient anemia in mice and humans. Here we confirm the inhibitory effect of matriptase-2 on hepcidin promoter; we show that matriptase-2 lacking the serine protease domain, identified in the anemic Mask mouse (matriptase-2(MASK)), is fully inactive and that mutant R774C found in patients with genetic iron deficiency has decreased inhibitory activity. Matriptase-2 cleaves hemojuvelin (HJV), a regulator of hepcidin, on plasma membrane; matriptase-2(MASK) shows no cleavage activity and the human mutant only partial cleavage capacity. Matriptase-2 interacts with HJV through the ectodomain since the interaction is conserved in matriptase-2(MASK). The expression of matriptase-2 mutants in zebrafish results in anemia, confirming the matriptase-2 role in iron metabolism and its interaction with HJV.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of dietary-induced iron deficiency on fetal and maternal metabolism were studied in the rat. Concentrations of phenylalanine, but not tyrosine, were significantly elevated in plasma from iron-deficient maternal and fetal rats at day 20 of gestation with individual fetal plasma levels of phenylalanine as high as 10 mg per 100 ml. Concentrations of total 5-hydroxyindole compounds were significantly decreased in brain tissue from iron-deficient fetuses (day 20 of gestation), suggesting that synthesis of the compounds may be inhibited by iron deficiency. Mitochondrial NADH oxidase activity was markedly decreased (60%) in homogenates of fetuses at day 14 of gestation and may account for the high fetal resorption rate and small fetal size observed in the rat in iron deficiency.  相似文献   

6.
The action of some aminoglycoside antibiotics on the immune system was studied on both intact mice and the animals with immune deficiency caused by administration of cyclophosphamide. The following tests were used: local hemolysis (the Herne test), lymphocyte transformation (LT), delayed hypersensitivity to sheep red blood cells and the local graft versus host reaction (GVHR). Amikacin was shown to have no significant action on the activity of lymphocytes in the intact mice and stimulated both cellular (LT and GVHR) and humoral (the Herne test) immunity in the animals with lowered immunological reactivity. Sisomicin had no significant action on the immune system of the animals. Gentamicin suppressed the immune response only in the intact mice. Kanamycin and streptomycin induced inhibition of humoral and cellular immunity in both the intact mice and animals with immune deficiency. On the basis of the results it was concluded that gentamicin, amikacin and sisomicin may be used in the treatment of diseases developing in the presence of immune deficiency whereas streptomycin and kanamycin should be recommended when inhibition of the immunity is needed.  相似文献   

7.
Iron deficiency accelerates suicidal erythrocyte death, which is evident from phosphatidylserine exposure. The present study explored whether iron deficiency compromises intraerythrocytic growth of Plasmodium and enhances death of infected erythrocytes thus influencing the course of malaria. As a result, phosphatidylserine exposure is increased in Plasmodium falciparum infected human erythrocytes, an effect significantly more marked in iron deficiency. Moreover, iron deficiency impairs in vitro intraerythrocytic growth and infection of erythrocytes. In mice, iron-deficient erythrocytes are more rapidly cleared from circulating blood, an effect increased by infection with Plasmodium berghei. Parasitemia in P. berghei infected mice was significantly decreased (from 54% to 33% of circulating erythrocytes 20 days after infection) and mouse survival significantly enhanced (from 0% to 20% 30 days after infection) in iron-deficient mice. In conclusion, iron deficiency favourably influences the course of malaria, an effect partially due to accelerated suicidal death and subsequent clearance of infected erythrocytes.  相似文献   

8.
Iron-deficiency anemia leads directly to both reduced hemoglobin levels and work performance in humans and experimental animals. In an attempt to observe a direct link between work performance and insufficient iron at the cellular level, we produced severe iron deficiency in female weanling Sprague-Dawley rats following five weeks on a low-iron diet. Deficient rats were compared with normal animals to observe major changes in hematological parameters, body weight, and growth of certain organs and tissues. The overall growth of iron-deficient animals was approximately 50% of normal. The ratio of organ weight: body weight increased in heart, liver, spleen, kidney, brain, and soleus muscle in response to iron deficiency. Further, mitochondria from heart and red muscle retained their iron more effectively under the stress of iron deficiency than mitochondria from liver and spleen. Metabolism of iron in normal and depleted tissue was measured using tracer amounts of59Fe administered orally. As expected, there was greater uptake of tracer iron by iron-deficient animals. The major organ of iron accumulation was the spleen, but significant amounts of isotope were also localized in heart and brain. In all muscle tissue examined the59Fe preferentially entered the mitochondria. Enhanced mitochondrial uptake of iron prior to any detectable change in the hemoglobin level in experimental animals may be indicative of nonhemoglobin related biochemical changes and/or decrements in work capacity.  相似文献   

9.
Relationship between selenium, immunity and resistance against infection   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
1. Food selenium content, selenium supply and selenium needs are presented, along with methods of evaluation of selenium status. Glutathione peroxidase, a selenium-containing enzyme, is ubiquitous in the organism. 2. Some experimental studies on animal models reported a positive relationship between selenium status and resistance against infections. 3. Only one study in humans concerned the mechanisms of immune functions in selenium deficiency. Several experimental works suggest that severe selenium deficiency compromises T-cell dependent immune functions such as the blastogenic response to mitogens, but selenium deficiency was concomitant with vitamin E deficiency in most of them. Delayed hypersensitivity response is controversial in selenium-supplemented rats and guinea-pigs. 4. Selenium deficiency in animals decreases the antibody response, especially if associated with vitamin E deficiency. Low dietary selenium supplementation of healthy animals has a positive effect upon humoral responses. 5. Despite some controversies, most experimental studies on selenium-deficient animals report normal phagocytosis and an altered bactericidal capacity of neutrophils. The decrease in glutathione peroxidase activity of polymorphonuclear cells following selenium deficiency could explain some of these alterations. 6. Splenic Natural Killer cells activity is enhanced in selenium-supplemented, healthy animals.  相似文献   

10.
The humoral immune response (as shown by plasma immunoglobulin concentrations and antibody response to diphtheria and tetanus toxoids) was evaluated in 14 children with iron-deficiency anaemia and in 24 normal controls. Mean concentrations of haemoglobin and serum iron and mean transferrin saturation were significantly lower in children with iron-deficiency anaemia than in controls. Serum immunoglobulin concentrations were within the normal range in both groups. Two weeks after immunisation with diphtheria and tetanus toxoids the concentrations of IgG increased significantly in both groups. Antibody titres in iron-deficient children were similar to those of controls before and after immunisation. The mean T-lymphocyte count was significantly lower in iron-deficient children than that in controls, but the mean B-lymphocyte counts were similar in the two groups. These observations suggest that humoral immunity in children is not affected by iron deficiency and that conventional immunisation programmes would be effective in children with iron-deficiency anaemia.  相似文献   

11.
《Cytokine》2014,65(2):175-183
Aneuploidy, a condition associated with altered chromosome number, hence DNA index, is frequently seen in many diseases including cancers and affects immunity. Iron, an essential nutrient for humans, modulates the immune function and the proliferation of normal and cancer cells. To determine whether impaired immunity seen in iron-deficient subjects may be related to aneuploidy, we measured spleen cell DNA index, percent of cells in different phases of the cell cycle, plasma and/or supernatant IL-2, IL-10, IL-12, and interferon-gamma in control, pair-fed, iron-deficient, and iron-replete mice (N = 20–22/group). The test and control diets differed only in iron content (0.09 mmol/kg versus 0.9 mmol/kg) and were fed for 68 days. Mean levels of hemoglobin and liver iron stores of iron-deficient and iron-replete mice were 40–60% lower than those of control and pair-fed mice (P < 0.05). Mean plasma levels of IL-10, interferon-gamma and percent of cells in S + G2/M phases were lower in mice with than in those without aneuploidy (P < 0.05). Lowest plasma IL-12 and interferon-gamma concentrations were observed in iron-deficient mice with aneuploidy. Mean percents of cultures with aneuploidy and DNA indexes were higher in iron-deficient and iron-replete than in control and pair-fed mice likely due to delayed cell division (P < 0.05). Aneuploidy decreased the concentration of IL-2 and interferon-gamma in baseline cultures while it increased that of interferon-gamma in anti-CD3 treated cultures. Aneuploidic indexes negatively correlated with cytokine levels, percents of cells in S + G2/M phases and indicators of iron status (P < 0.05). Although chromosome cytogenetics was not performed, for the first time, we report that increased aneuploidy rate may modulate the immune function during iron-deficiency.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of iron deficiency on heme biosynthesis in Rhizobium japonicum were examined. Iron-deficient cells had a decreased maximum cell yield and a decreased cytochrome content and excreted protoporphyrin into the growth medium. The activities of the first two enzymes of heme biosynthesis, delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase (EC 2.3.1.37) and delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase (EC 4.2.1.24), were diminished in iron-deficient cells, but were returned to normal levels upon addition of iron to the cultures. The addition of iron salts, iron chelators, hemin, or protoporphyrin to cell-free extracts did not affect the activity of these enzymes. The addition of levulinic acid to iron-deficient cultures blocked protoporphyrin excretion and also resulted in high delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase and delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase activities. These results suggest the possibility that rhizobial heme biosynthesis in the legume root nodule may be affected by the release of iron from the host plant to the bacteroids.  相似文献   

13.
Brooks et al. [Am. J. Physiol. 253 (Endocrinol. Metab. 16): E461-E466, 1987] demonstrated an elevated gluconeogenic rate in resting iron-deficient rats. Because physical exercise also imposes demand on this hepatic function, we hypothesized that exercise training superimposed on iron deficiency would augment the hepatic capacity for amino acid transamination/deamination and pyruvate carboxylation. Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 32) were obtained at weaning (21 days of age) and randomly assigned to iron-sufficient (dietary iron = 60 mg iron/kg diet) or iron-deficient (3 mg iron/kg) dietary groups. Dietary groups were subdivided into sedentary and trained subgroups. Treadmill training was 4 wk in duration, 6 days/wk, 1 h/day, 0% grade. Treadmill speed was initially 26.8 m/min and was decreased to 14.3 m/min over the 4-wk training period. The mild exercise-training regimen did not affect any measured variable in iron-sufficient rats. In contrast, in iron-deficient animals, training increased endurance capacity threefold and reduced blood lactate and the lactate-to-alanine ratio during submaximal exercise by 34 and 27%, respectively. The mitochondrial oxidative capacity of gastrocnemius muscle was increased 46% by training. However, the oxidative capacity of liver was not affected by either iron deficiency or training. Maximal rates of pyruvate carboxylation and glutamine metabolism by isolated liver mitochondria were also evaluated. Iron deficiency and training interacted to increase pyruvate carboxylation by intact mitochondria. Glutamine metabolism was increased roughly threefold by iron deficiency alone, and training amplified this effect to a ninefold increase over iron-sufficient animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Over-production of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and under-production of interleukin-10 (IL-10) are associated with autoimmunity, whereas the opposite is associated with overwhelming infections. The influence of iron deficiency, a public health problem for children on in vivo secretion of these cytokines has not been previously investigated. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether iron deficiency alters serum levels of IFN-gamma, IL-10, and IL-12 in mice. DESIGN AND METHODS: Cytokine levels were measured by enzyme immunoassay in iron-deficient (ID), control (C), pair-fed (PF), and iron replete C57BL/6 mice for 3 (R3) and 14 (R14) days (n = 24-28, 12 R14). RESULTS: Iron deficiency was associated with > or = 50% reduction in hemoglobin, hematocrit, liver iron stores, and thymus weight (p < 0.05). Iron repletion improved these measurements. While iron deficiency significantly reduced IL-12p40 (64%) and IFN-gamma (66%) levels, underfeeding reduced those of IL-10 (48%) (p < 0.05). Iron repletion improved cytokine concentrations to PF levels. Thymus atrophy observed in 16 ID and 19 R3 mice, had no effect on IL-12p40 and IFN-gamma, whereas it further decreased IL-10 levels by 72% (p < 0.05). Cytokine levels positively correlated with indicators of iron status, body and thymus weights (r < or = 0.688, p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Data suggest that iron deficiency alters the balance between pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, a change that may affect innate and cell-mediated immunity, and risk of autoimmune disorders.  相似文献   

15.
Myocardial iron deficiency complicates chronic intrauterine hypoxemia during diabetic pregnancies. To understand the effect of both conditions during fetal life on intracardiac iron prioritization, we measured heart myoglobin, cytochrome c, and elemental iron concentrations in six iron-deficient, hypoxic, five iron-sufficient, hypoxic, six iron-deficient, normoxic, and six iron-sufficient, normoxic newborn guinea pigs. The iron-deficient, hypoxic group had lower heart iron (p = 0.03) but higher myoglobin concentration (p < 0.0001) when compared with the iron-sufficient, normoxic group. The percentage of iron incorporated into myoglobin was higher than control in the iron-deficient, hypoxic group (23.2+/-7.2% vs. 5.2+/-0.8%; p < 0.001) and increased as total heart iron decreased (r = 0.97; p < 0.001). In contrast, heart cytochrome c concentration was lower than control in the iron-deficient, hypoxic group (p = 0.01), with equal percentages of heart iron incorporated into cytochrome c. This intracellular prioritization of myocardial iron to myoglobin and away from cytochrome c following combined fetal hypoxemia and iron deficiency may represent an adaptive mechanism to preserve myocardial tissue oxygenation, although at the expense of oxidative phosphorylative capability.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of dietary iron and zinc was studied in chicks. Zinc was found to be more toxic in iron-deficient animals than iron-supplemented animals as measured by hemoglobin concentrations and growth. Analyses of the kidney and liver for iron and zinc were carried out. As the level of iron was increased from 0-1000 ppm supplementation, the concentration of liver zinc increased. The organ levels of iron were decreased as the dietary zinc levels were increased from 0-5000 ppm. Radioisotope studies using65Zn revealed that the iron content of the diet did not affect absorption of zinc. Administration of the isotope, either in an intestinal segment or intravenously, resulted in more zinc being taken up by the liver in the iron supplemented animals. This was especially noted when the ratio of the isotope in liver to that in the blood was compared. Gel chromatography of kidney and liver homogenates revealed that iron deficiency resulted in less zinc being eluted in a volume characteristic of metallothionein compared to homogenates of organs from iron supplemented animals. The results indicate that iron-supplemented animals have a greater capacity for sequestering zinc on metallothionein than do iron-deficient animals. Conversely, iron-deficient chicks were more susceptible to the effects of zinc toxicity than are iron-adequate chicks.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated physiological and biochemical factors associated with the improved work capacity of trained iron-deficient rats. Female 21-day-old rats were assigned to one of four groups, two dietary groups (50 and 6 ppm dietary iron) subdivided into two levels of activity (sedentary and treadmill trained). Iron deficiency decreased hemoglobin (61%), maximal O2 uptake. (VO2max) (40%), skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidase activities (59-90%), and running endurance (94%). In contrast, activities of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzymes in skeletal muscle were largely unaffected. Four weeks of mild training in iron-deficient rats resulted in improved blood lactate homeostasis during exercise and increased VO2max (15%), TCA cycle enzymes of skeletal muscle (27-58%) and heart (29%), and liver NADH oxidase (34%) but did not affect any of these parameters in the iron-sufficient animals. In iron-deficient rats training affected neither the blood hemoglobin level nor any measured iron-dependent enzyme pathway of skeletal muscle but substantially increased endurance (230%). We conclude that the training-induced increase in endurance in iron-deficient rats may be related to cardiovascular improvements, elevations in liver oxidative capacity, and increases in the activities of oxidative enzymes that do not contain iron in skeletal and cardiac muscle.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of dietary iron levels on vanadium toxicity was studied in chicks. Dietary iron levels ranged from a deficiency, ca. 10 ppm, to an adequacy, 100 ppm supplemental iron. to an excess, 1000 ppm supplemental iron. Vanadium was fed at 10, 20, and 40 ppm. Vanadium toxicity as measured by chick growth was more severe in the iron-deficient animals than in those receiving supplemental iron. The increase in degree of toxicity in the iron-deficient animals was accompanied by an increase in the liver vanadium, both total and concentration. The addition, of vanadium to the diet did not influence the iron concentration of the liver or kidney. Radioisotope, studies with48V revealed that the absorption of vanadium was not influenced by the iron concentration of the diet, but that the iron-deficient animals retained more vanadium in the blood and liver and less in the bone than did the iron supplemented animals. It is proposed that the degree of iron saturation of transferrin and ferritin to which vanadium can bind is a possible explanation for the results obtained. Paper No. 10687 of the Journal Series of the NC Agricultural Research Service, Raleigh, NC 27695-7601. The use of trade names implies neither endorsement of the products named nor criticism of similar products not mentioned by the NCARS.  相似文献   

19.
20.
BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori, which requires iron to survive, may cause host iron deficiency by directly competing with the host for available iron or by impairing iron uptake as a consequence of atrophy-associated gastric hypochlorhydria. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of H. pylori infection and dietary iron deficiency on host iron homeostasis in a mouse model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: H. pylori SS1-infected and uninfected C57BL/6 mice, fed either a normal diet or an iron-deficient diet, were assessed for iron status and infection-associated gastritis over a 30-week period. RESULTS: After 10 weeks, serum ferritin values were higher in H. pylori-infected mice than in uninfected controls, irrespective of dietary iron intake (p = .04). The infection-related increase in body iron stores persisted in the iron-replete mice but diminished over time in mice with restricted dietary iron intake (p < .0001). At 30 weeks serum ferritin levels were lower in these animals (p = .063). No significant difference in bacterial numbers was detected at the 30-week time point (p > .05) and the histological changes observed were consistently associated with infection (p < .01) and not with the iron status of the mice (p = .771). CONCLUSIONS: Infection with H. pylori did not cause iron deficiency in iron-replete mice. However, diminished iron stores in mice as a result of limited dietary iron intake were further lowered by concurrent infection, thus indicating that H. pylori competes successfully with the host for available iron.  相似文献   

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