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Journal of Nutrition Vol. 112 No. 9 September 1982, pp. 1706-1717
Copyright © 1982 by American Society for Nutrition
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Effect of Dietary or Genetic Copper Deficiency on Brain Catecholamines, Trace Metals and Enzymes in Mice and Rats1,2,

Joseph R. Prohaska and Timothy L. Smith

Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Duluth, Duluth, MN 55812

Previous studies by others indicated that alterations in brain catecholamines were different for perinatal copper deficiency produced by diet in rats and that resulting from a genetic mutation on the X-chromosome, Menkes' syndrome in humans and brindled mice. Thus, copper deficiency was studied in a model in which dietary and genetic deficiency (brindled mice) were compared in two strains of the same species, C57BL and C3H/HeJ mice. Dietary copper deficiency was also produced in rats for comparison. In brain, both dietary and genetic copper deficiency resulted in impaired growth, low brain copper levels, greatly decreased norepinephrine concentrations but normal dopamine levels. The activity of brain cytochrome oxidase was greatly depressed following both dietary and genetic copper deficiency, suggesting a functional deficit of copper. However, the activity of another cuproenzyme, dopamine-ß-hydroxylase, was significantly elevated in deficient animals. The elevation was observed when either copper or N-ethylmaleimide was added to inactivate an endogenous inhibitor. The cause of low brain norepinephrine remains unknown; however, depressed brain norepinephrine may be partly responsible for functional changes in the deficient animals, such as hypomyelination, since the activity of the myelin protein, 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase, was lower in the most deficient animals.


KEY WORDS: • copper deficiency • brindled mice • catecholamines • dopamine-ß-hydroxylase

1 Supported by grants HD 15491-01 from the National Institutes of Health, DMRF 51-80, from the Minnesots Medical Foundation and funds from the Graduate School, University of Minnesota.

2 Presented in part at the annual meeting of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology in New Orleans, LA, 1982. Joseph R. Prohaska and Timothy L. Smith (1982) Comparison of brain catecholamine metabolism during dietary and genetic copper deficiency. Fed. Proc. 41, 1118 (abs.)

Manuscript received 22 March 1982.


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A. D. Smith, S. Botero, and O. A. Levander
Copper Deficiency Increases the Virulence of Amyocarditic and Myocarditic Strains of Coxsackievirus B3 in Mice
J. Nutr., May 1, 2008; 138(5): 849 - 855.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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