首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 125 毫秒
1.
An eight-week, 2 x 4 factorial rat experiment using two levels of dietary copper and four levels of dietary silicon was conducted to further delineate a previously observed silicon-copper interaction in which silicon appears to mimic copper in its effect on the composition of the aorta. Dietary copper concentrations were 1.4 (deficient) and 5.4 (adequate) mg/kg diet, and silicon concentrations were 5, 135, 270, and 540 mg/kg diet. Compared with the lowest level of silicon and copper, weight gains were 15.5% higher for rats fed 540 mg silicon/kg diet and 14.3% higher for those fed 5.4 mg copper/kg diet. The growth-promoting effects of silicon and copper were additive. Evidence that silicon elevated the copper status of copper-deficient rats includes an increase in packed-cell volume by 540 mg silicon/kg diet in the otherwise packed-cell volume-depressed, copper-deficient rats, accompanied by a trend toward higher hemoglobin values and lower relative heart weights. In the copper-adequate rats, evidence that 540 mg silicon/kg diet elevated their copper status includes a two-fold increase in the blood-plasma copper concentration, a three-fold increase in ceruloplasmin activity, and an increase in cardiac, renal, and hepatic copper concentrations. In addition, 540 mg silicon/kg diet resulted in higher aortic dry mass and aortic elastin content in both copper-deficient and copper-adequate rats. While dietary silicon concentrations of 135, 270, and 540 mg/kg diet were all effective in increasing aortic elastin in the copper-adequate rats, only 540 mg silicon/kg diet increased aortic elastin in the copper-deficient rats. These data indicate that some of the metabolic effects attributed to silicon may be manifested through a silicon-facilitated increase in copper utilization.  相似文献   

2.
The interaction between dietary copper and zinc as determined by tissue concentrations of trace elements was investigated in male Sprague-Dawley rats. Animals were fed diets in a factorial design with two levels of copper (0.5, 5 μg/g) and five levels of zinc (1, 4.5, 10, 100, 1000 μg/g) for 42 d. In rats fed the low copper diet, as dietary zinc concentration increased, the level of copper decreased in brain, testis, spleen, heart, liver, and intestine. There was no significant effect of dietary copper on tissue zinc levels. In the zinc-deficient groups, the level of iron was higher in most tissues than in tissues from controls (5 μg Cu, 100 μg Zn/g diet). In the copper-deficient groups, iron concentration was higher than control values only in the liver. These data show that dietary zinc affected tissue copper levels primarily when dietary copper was deficient, that dietary copper had no effect on tissue zinc, and that both zinc deficiency and copper deficiency affected tissue iron levels.  相似文献   

3.
Folate and homocysteine metabolism in copper-deficient rats.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
To investigate the effect of copper deficiency on folate and homocysteine metabolism, we measured plasma, red-cell and hepatic folate, plasma homocysteine and vitamin B-12 concentrations, and hepatic methionine synthase activities in rats. Two groups of male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed semi-purified diets containing either 0. 1 mg (copper-deficient group) or 9.2 mg (control group) of copper per kg. After 6 weeks of dietary treatment, copper deficiency was established as evidenced by markedly decreased plasma and hepatic copper concentrations in rats fed the low-copper diet. Plasma, red-cell, hepatic folate, and plasma vitamin B-12 concentrations were similar in both groups, whereas plasma homocysteine concentrations in the copper-deficient group were significantly higher than in the control group (P<0.05). Copper deficiency resulted in a 21% reduction in hepatic methionine synthase activity as compared to the control group (P<0.01). This change most likely caused the increased hepatic 5-methyltetrahydrofolate and plasma homocysteine concentrations in the copper-deficient group. Our results indicate that hepatic methionine synthase may be a cuproenzyme, and plasma homocysteine concentrations are influenced by copper nutriture in rats. These data support the concept that copper deficiency can be a risk factor for cardiovascular disease.  相似文献   

4.
Weanling male rats were fed a copper-deficient diet devoid of cholesterol. The effects of varying the source of carbohydrate and supplements of copper and zinc on cardiovascular pathology and some biochemical and physiological parameters were investigated. It was found that cardiomyopathy developed in copper-deficient groups. Sucrose, in contrast to starch or starch:lactose (1:1), caused significant exacerbation of this situation. Increasing dietary Cu to 8 ppm prevented or minimized the development of cardiomyopathy. Angiopathy occurred only when dietary zinc was at the lower level (20 ppm). Dietary copper supplements to 8.0 ppm did not alter this situation, but 120 ppm Zn in the drinking water did reduce the angiopathy almost to the control level, except in the groups in which sucrose was fed. Serum cholesterol was only elevated significantly over the control value when dietary copper was deficient and sucrose was the carbohydrate source. The data point to independent action of dietary copper or zinc on the myocardium or vessels, respectively, with sucrose interacting to make copper and zinc supplements less active than when starch or starch/lactose was fed.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Both arginine and silicon affect collagen formation and bone mineralization. Thus, an experiment was designed to determine if dietary arginine would alter the effect of dietary silicon on bone mineralization and vice versa. Male weanling Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to groups of 12 in a 2×2 factorially arranged experiment. Supplemented to a ground corn/casein basal diet containing 2.3 μg Si/g and adequate arginine were silicon as sodium metasilicate at 0 or 35 μg/g diet and arginine at 0 or 5 mg/g diet. The rats were fed ad libitum deionized water and their respective diets for 8 wk. Body weight, liver weight/body weight ratio, and plasma silicon were decreased, and plasma alkaline phosphatase activity was increased by silicon deprivation. Silicon deprivation also decreased femoral calcium, copper, potassium, and zinc concentrations, but increased the femoral manganese concentration. Arginine supplementation decreased femoral molybdenum concentration but increased the femoral manganese concentration. Vertebral concentrations of phosphorus, sodium, potassium, copper, manganese, and zinc were decreased by silicon deprivation. Arginine supplementation increased vertebral concentrations of sodium, potassium, manganese, zinc, and iron. The arginine effects were more marked in the silicon-deprived animals, especially in the vertebra. Germanium concentrations of the femur and vertebra were affected by an interaction between silicon and arginine; the concentrations were decreased by silicon deprivation in those animals not fed supplemental arginine. The change in germanium is consistent with a previous finding by us suggesting that this element may be physiologically important, especially as related to bone DNA concentrations. The femoral and vertebral mineral findings support the contention that silicon has a physiological role in bone formation and that arginine intake can affect that role. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Northern Plains Area is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer, and all agency services are available without discrimination. Mention of a trademark or proprietary product does not constitute a guarantee or warranty of the product by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and does not imply its approval to the exclusion of other products that may be suitable.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of nutritional copper deficiency on carrageenin edema in the rat were investigated with emphasis on studying the correlation between the degree of copper deficiency and the degree of edema. Carrageenin paw edema in both copper-sufficient and copper-deficient groups of rats was compared after either 20, 40, or 60 d on respective diets. The degree of copper deficiency was quantitated by analyzing total copper concentrations in a number of tissues. Other copper dependent parameters were also determined. Results indicated that: (1) although copper sufficient rats showed relatively little change in the degree of edema, copper-deficient rats showed a steady and significant increase in edema from d 20 to 40 to 60; (2) paw edema in copper-deficient animals was highly and negatively correlated to the concentrations of copper in the liver; the correlation with liver Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase activity, however, was inconsistent; (3) paw edema was not correlated either to copper concentration in tissues other than liver or to plasma ceruloplasmin activity; and (4) aggravation of carrageenin edema in copper-deficient animals seemed to be mediated via an as yet unknown secondary effect of copper deficiency.  相似文献   

8.
Two 42-d experiments were conducted with weanling male rats to study interactions between nickel and copper. In Experiment 1, a low-copper basal diet was supplemented with copper at 0 or 30 ppm and nickel at 0 or 30 ppm. Copper was added in Experiment 2 to a basal copper-deficient diet at a level of 0 or 15 ppm and nickel was supplemented at 0, 15, or 225 ppm. Responses to dietary nickel were dependent upon copper nutriture and experimental duration. Nickel had little effect on growth during the first 21 d of either study when added at low levels (15 or 30 ppm) to copper-deficient diets. Nickel supplementation depressed gains between 21 and 42 d in rats fed copper-deficient, but not copper-adequate, diets. Hematocrits and hemoglobin concentrations were not significantly affected by dietary nickel at 21 d. Nickel supplementation decreased hematocrits and hemoglobin values in copper deficient rats at 42 d in Experiment 1, but not in Experiment 2. Absorption of copper apparently was not reduced by nickel, since tissue copper concentrations were generally not decreased by increasing dietary nickel. Nickel supplementation increased lung and heart copper concentrations in Experiment 2. Liver iron was not affected by nickel, but spleen iron concentrations were reduced by nickel supplementation in copper-deficient rats in Experiment 2. The present studies suggest that nickel acts antagonistically to copper in certain biological processes.  相似文献   

9.
Mineral (phosphorus, sulfur, potassium, calcium, magnesium, iron, zinc, copper, and manganese) concentrations were measured in plasma, and several tissues from female Wistar rats (young: 3-wk-old; mature: 6-mo-old) were fed on a dietary regimen designed to study the combined or singular effects of age and dietary protein on mineral status. Three diets, respectively, contained 5, 15, and 20% of bovine milk casein. Nephrocalcinosis chemically diagnosed by increased calcium and phosphorus in kidney was prevented in rats fed a 5% protein diet. Renal calcium and phosphorus were more accumulated in young rats than mature rats. A 5% protein diet decreased hemoglobin and blood iron. The hepatic and splenic iron was increased by a 5% protein diet in mature rats but was not altered in young rats. Mature rats had higher iron in brain, lung, heart, liver, spleen, kidney, muscle, and tibia than young rats. A 5% protein diet decreased zinc in plasma and liver. Zinc in tibia was increased with dietary protein level in young rats but was not changed in mature rats. A 5% protein diet decreased copper concentration in plasma of young rats but not in mature rats. Mature rats had higher copper in plasma, blood, brain, lung, heart, liver, spleen, and kidney than young rats. With age, manganese concentration was increased in brain but decreased in lung, heart, liver, kidney, and muscle. These results suggest that the response to dietary protein regarding mineral status varies with age.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Recent studies have suggested that the induction of metallothionein synthesis in kidneys of mice by the acute administration of bismuth and other trace elements might protect against cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) nephrotoxicity. The present study was designed to determine the effects of dietary zinc and cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) on the induction of liver and kidney metallothionein and its subsequent effect on nephrotoxicity and trace element metabolism in rats. Male rats were fed diets containing 5, 20, 80, or 320 mg zinc/kg diet for 3 weeks. Each dietary group was subdivided into 3 groups. In one group, each rat received an i.p. injection of 7.5 mg cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II)/kg b.w. All other rats received saline. During the next three days a second group of rats was pair-fed to the cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) injected group. A third group received no treatment and was allowed to eat ad libitum. Results showed that when dietary zinc was increased from 5 mg/kg diet to higher amounts, kidney metallothionein concentration increased twofold. cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) treatment increased kidney metallothionein even further, but elevated metallothionein gave no protection from the toxic effects of the drug. Serum copper concentration and ceruloplasmin activity were significantly lower with higher concentrations of dietary zinc, which indicated that these rats were mildly copper-deficient. There was a small but significant depression of superoxide dismutase activity and a highly significant increase in thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in kidneys of rats treated with cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) compared to either pair-fed or ad libitum controls. This supports the hypothesis that part of the mechanism for cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II)-induced toxicity might be caused by free-radical generation. However, the data do not support the hypothesis that metallothionein induction protects the kidney from cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) toxicity.  相似文献   

12.
Discovery of a sensitive blood biochemical marker of copper status would be valuable for assessing marginal copper intakes. Rodent models were used to investigate whether erythrocyte concentrations of copper,zinc-superoxide dismutase (SOD), and the copper metallochaperone for SOD (CCS) were sensitive to dietary copper changes. Several models of copper deficiency were studied in postweanling male Holtzman rats, male Swiss Webster mice offspring, and both rat and mouse dams. Treatment resulted in variable but significantly altered copper status as evaluated by the presence of anemia, and lower liver copper and higher liver iron concentrations in copper-deficient compared with copper-adequate animals. Associated with this copper deficiency were consistent reductions in immunoreactive SOD and robust enhancements in CCS. In most cases, the ratio of CCS:SOD was several-fold higher in red blood cell extracts from copper-deficient compared with copper-adequate rodents. Determination of red cell CCS:SOD may be useful for assessing copper status of humans.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Kidney copper increased 12- to 18-fold above the normal level in rats administered alpha-mercapto-beta-(2-furyl)acrylic acid (MFA). Kidney zinc increased twofold; plasma zinc increased more than 10-fold and liver zinc increased 30–50%. No other changes in copper, iron, and zinc concentrations were found in these tissues or in bone, brain, heart, lung, skeletal muscle, spleen, or testis. Related compounds produced similar effects, although MFA and its disulfide were the most potent of the compounds tested. These increases in tissue copper and zinc were largely complete after 2–5 d of daily administration of compound. Increased plasma zinc returned toward normal with a half-life of 1.0 d for the process, after dosing was ended; albumin was identified as the species binding the excess zinc in plasma. Kidney copper and zinc, which had increased in the ratio of 3 Cu/Zn, returned to normal levels after dosing was stopped with half-lives of 2.1–2.5 d. Consistent with the observations of highly tissuespecific effects of MFA, copper and zinc balances over 8 weeks of trials were found to be not greatly affected by administration of the compound. Thus, it was not established whether excess metal in affected organs derived from enhanced retention of dietary metal or redistribution from other tissues. Kidney copper and zinc and serum zinc increased even in zinc-deficient rats administered MFA.  相似文献   

15.
The elastin content of the chick thoracic aorta increases 2--3-fold during the first 3 weeks post-hatching. The deposition of elastin requires the covalent cross-linking of tropoelastin by means of lysine-derived cross-links. This process is sensitive to dietary copper intake, since copper serves as cofactor for lysyl oxidase, the enzyme that catalyses the oxidative deamination of the lysine residues involved in cross-link formation. Disruption of cross-linking alters tissue concentrations of both elastin and tropoelastin and results in a net decrease in aortic elastin content. Autoregulation of tropoelastin synthesis by changes in the pool sizes of elastin or tropoelastin has been suggested as a possible mechanism for the diminished aortic elastin content. Consequently, dietary copper deficiency was induced to study the effect of impaired elastin cross-link formation on tropoelastin synthesis. Elastin in aortae from copper-deficient chicks was only two-thirds to one-half the amount measured in copper-supplemented chicks, whereas copper-deficient concentrations of tropoelastin in aorta were at least 5-fold higher than normal. In spite of these changes, however, increased amounts of tropoelastin, copper deficiency and decreased amounts of elastin did not influence the amounts of functional elastin mRNA in aorta. Likewise, the production of tropoelastin in aorta explants was the same whether the explants were taken from copper-sufficient or -deficient birds. The lower accumulation of elastin in aorta from copper-deficient chicks appeared to be due to extracellular proteolysis, rather than to a decrease in the rate of synthesis. Electrophoresis of aorta extracts, followed by immunological detection of tropoelastin-derived products, indicated degradation products in aortae from copper-deficient birds. In extracts of aortae from copper-sufficient chicks, tropoelastin was not degraded and appeared to be incorporated into elastin without further proteolytic processing.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies have shown that cardiac-specific overexpression of metallothionein (MT) inhibits progression of dietary copper restriction-induced cardiac hypertrophy. Because copper and zinc are critically involved in myocardial response to dietary copper restriction, the present study was undertaken to understand the effect of MT on the status of copper and zinc in the heart and the subsequent response to dietary copper restriction. Dams of cardiac-specific MT-transgenic (MT-TG) mouse pups and wild-type (WT) littermates were fed copper-adequate (CuA) or copper-deficient (CuD) diet starting on the fourth day post delivery, and the weanling mice were continued on the same diet until they were sacrificed. Zinc and copper concentrations were significantly elevated in MT-TG mouse heart, but the extent of zinc elevation was much more than that of copper. Dietary copper restriction significantly decreased copper concentrations to the same extent in both MT-TG and WT mouse hearts, and decreased zinc concentrations along with a decrease in MT concentrations in the MT-TG mouse heart. Copper deficiency-induced heart hypertrophy was significantly inhibited, but copper deficiency-induced suppression of serum ceruloplasmin or hepatic Cu,Zn-SOD activities was not inhibited in the MT-TG mice. These results suggest that elevation in zinc but not in copper in the heart may be involved in the MT inhibition of copper deficiency-induced cardiac hypertrophy.  相似文献   

17.
High density lipoprotein (HDL) apoprotein catabolism was examined in male Sprague-Dawley rats deficient in dietary copper. Twenty-four rats were randomly divided into two groups: copper-adequate (control, 5 mg of copper/kg diet) and copper-deficient (0.6 mg of copper/kg diet). After 5 weeks, animals were administered a tracer dose of iodinated HDL protein previously isolated from donor rats that were subjected to the same dietary treatments as the test animals. Copper-deficient rats exhibited a 54% increase in plasma volume and a 26% increase in HDL protein concentration above controls. Consequently, the intravascular pool of total HDL protein was increased 2-fold. The fractional catabolic rate of total HDL protein was similar between groups. However, because of the increased intravascular HDL pool in copper-deficient animals, the absolute catabolic rate was greater (640 +/- 49 micrograms/hr vs 316 +/- 12 micrograms/hr in controls). Tissue uptake of total HDL protein in copper-deficient rats tended to be greater in the kidneys, spleen, and testes compared with controls; the heart exhibited a significant 2.3-fold increase. In contrast, the catabolic rate of HDL protein in the liver and adrenal gland were not different between treatment groups. That an obligatory increase in HDL protein uptake was not observed in the liver and adrenal gland (organs which are sensitive to and can further metabolize cholesterol) suggests that these organs may be regulated, possibly contributing to the observed hypercholesterolemia in this model. These data imply that total HDL apoprotein catabolism is increased in response to the increased intravascular pool of HDL in copper-deficient rats.  相似文献   

18.
Three groups (14 rats each) were fed one of the following diets for 8 wks: a control purified basal diet containing 12 ppm zinc, 5 ppm copper, and 35 ppm iron; the basal diet with less than 2 ppm zinc; or the basal diet supplemented with 1000 ppm zinc. Rats fed the zinc-deficient diet had decreased weight gain, moderate polydipsia, and intermittent mild diarrhea. The zinc-supplemented rats had a cyclical pattern of food intake and weight loss from weeks 5 to 8. Tissue concentrations suggest that zinc and copper were not mutually antagonistic with chronic dietary imbalances. If tissue element concentrations reflected intestinal uptake, then competition and/or inhibition of intestinal uptake occurred between zinc and iron. The fluctuations in tissue element concentrations that occurred with increased duration of the study were at variance with previous studies of shorter time periods. The dietary proportions of zinc, copper, and iron appear to influence zinc, copper, and iron metabolism at the intestinal and cellular transport levels over a given period of time.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of repeated parenteral administration of cadmium (0.75, 1.5 and 3.0 mg/kg) on tissue disposition and urinary excretion of cadmium, zinc, copper and iron has been studied in the male rat. Cadmium, zinc and copper accumulated in liver and kidney, but the concentration of iron did not alter significantly. The kidney weight relative to body weight showed a dose-related increase in weight of 25--65%. Excretion of cadmium in the urine increased directly with dosage and the increase was most significant when kidney damage had probably occurred. Administration of cadmium also resulted in dose-related increases in the urinary excretion of zinc, copper and iron. The cadmium concentration of blood increased with dosage of cadmium, and the plasma concentrations of zinc and copper were also raised but plasma iron concentration was diminished.  相似文献   

20.
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   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号