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Effects of Maternal Dietary Zinc on Growth and Mitogenic Responsiveness in Suckling Mice1

Kim M. Hildebrandt, Richard W. Luecke2 and Pamela J. Fraker

Department of Biochemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824

The effects of varied levels of maternal dietary zinc on growth and immunological development of suckling A/J mice were studied. From 5 days postpartum, lactating dams were fed biotin-fortified egg-white diets containing the following levels of zinc: 1.6 µg/g (low zinc), 3.6 µg/g (intermediate zinc), 5.8 µg/g (moderate zinc) and 30 µg/g (control). At 17 days of age, low zinc pups exhibited reduced body weight gain (70%), smaller thymuses and spleens, and reduced splenocyte numbers (18%). Intermediate zinc pups had normal body weights but slightly reduced spleens and thymuses; moderate zinc pups were unaffected. Since suckling mice are not fully immunocompetent, splenic mitogenic responses to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), concanavalin A (Con A), lipopolysaccharide (LPS), pokeweed mitogen (PWM), and dextran sulfate (Dx) were used to evaluate the status of various lymphocyte subpopulations. Neonates from the low zinc group gave no Con A response and limited responses to LPS and PWM (50%). Intermediate zinc pups responded satisfactorily to all mitogens except LPS (64%); moderate zinc pups responded normally. It was concluded that 5.8 µg/g maternal dietary zinc, fed day 5–17 postpartum, is adequate for normal neonatal growth and mitogenic responses. Conversely, 1.6 µg Zn/g caused neonatal growth retardation and reduced mitogenic responses without excessive mortality.


KEY WORDS: • zinc deficiency • suckling mouse • neonates • mitogens • immune development

1 Supported in part by National Institutes of Health Public Health Service grant HD10586 and the Michigan Agriculture Experiment Station as Journal Article No. 10381.

2 To whom reprint requests should be sent.

Manuscript received 8 April 1982.





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