Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T07:55:41.927Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effect of dietary copper deficiency on iron metabolism in the pregnant rat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2007

Henriette S. Andersen
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB21 9SB, UK
Lorraine Gambling
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB21 9SB, UK
Grietje Holtrop
Affiliation:
BioSS, Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB21 9SB, UK
Harry J. McArdle*
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB21 9SB, UK
*
*Professor H. J. McArdle, fax +44 1224 716622, [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Cu and Fe metabolism are known to be linked, but the interactions during pregnancy are less well studied. In the present study we used rats to examine the effect of Cu deficiency during pregnancy on Fe and Cu levels in maternal and fetal tissue and on the gene expression profile of proteins involved in Cu and Fe metabolism in the placenta. Rats were fed diets with different Cu contents before and during pregnancy. Samples were collected on day 21 of gestation. Cu levels, ceruloplasmin activity and serum Fe all decreased in maternal serum of Cu-deficient animals. Maternal liver Fe inversely correlated with liver Cu. Placental Cu levels decreased with no change in Fe. Fe and Cu levels both decreased in the fetal liver. The drop in maternal liver Cu was significantly correlated with a decrease in organ weight of fetal liver, lung and kidney. No changes were observed in mRNA expression of Cu transporter 1, Menkes P-type Cu-ATPase 7A, Wilson P-type Cu-ATPase 7B, cytochrome-c oxidase, and Cu chaperone Atox1 in the placenta of Cu-deficient dams. Transferrin receptor 1 and the Fe-responsive element (IRE)-regulated divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) were up regulated; while ferroportin and non-IRE1-regulated DMT1 levels did not change. These data show that Cu deficiency during pregnancy not only has a direct effect on Fe levels but also regulates the expression of Fe transporters. The pattern closely mirrors that seen in Fe deficiency, suggesting that the changes are a consequence of the decrease in serum Fe, implying that the developing fetus not only suffers from Cu, but also from Fe deficiency.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2007

The metabolism of Fe and Cu are closely linked. Initial observations were made in 1927, where Fe salts failed to cure anaemia in rats, while administration of Cu in the form of ashed foodstuff restored their Hb levels (Waddell et al., Reference Waddell, Steenbock, Elvehjem and Hart1927). Since then, several studies have confirmed the relationship. In general, severe Cu deficiency causes changes in Fe metabolism leading to anaemia and liver Fe accumulation. The mechanism involved is not fully understood, but is probably related to decreased expression and levels of enzymes such as ceruloplasmin (Cp) and hephaestin, which are multicopper oxidases required for Fe efflux. In support of this, mice with a mutation in hephaestin are anaemic and accumulate Fe in the gut (Vulpe et al., Reference Vulpe, Kuo, Murphy, Cowley, Askwith, Libina, Gitschier and Anderson1999) and patients with aceruloplasminaemia suffer from anaemia rather than Cu deficiency (Harris et al., Reference Harris, Klomp and Gitlin1995, Reference Harris, Takahashi, Miyajima, Serizawa, MacGillivray and Gitlin1998). Danzeisen et al. (Reference Danzeisen, Fosset, Page, David and McArdle2002) discovered a similar oxidase in a placenta cell line (BeWo cells) which is regulated by both Cu and Fe status.

We know that the dietary intake of Cu in women aged 19–24 years is only 78 % of the recommended daily intake (0·9–1·2 mg Cu/d; IOM, 2001). During pregnancy this may be even more of a problem as the need of micronutrients increases due to the requirements of a growing fetus. Cu is essential for fetal development and maternal dietary Cu deficiency can have both short- and long-term consequences (for a review, see Keen et al., Reference Keen, Hanna, Lanoue, Uriu-Adams, Rucker and Clegg2003). The extent to which Cu deficiency affects pregnancy outcome is very much dependent on the degree of Cu limitation. Severe Cu deficiency can lead to reproductive failure, early embryonic death and gross structural abnormalities in the fetuses (Prohaska & Brokate, Reference Prohaska and Brokate2002). In contrast, moderate or mild Cu deficiency has little effect on either the number of live births and neonatal weight (Masters et al., Reference Masters, Keen, Lonnerdal and Hurley1983). However, the fetuses can suffer from lipid deposits in the connective tissue, cardiac haemorrhage, and skeletal defects (Wildman et al., Reference Wildman, Hopkins, Failla and Medeiros1995). It is therefore important to characterise the effect that Cu deficiency during pregnancy has on Fe metabolism and to elucidate the mechanism behind such alteration.

During pregnancy the transport of micronutrients from the mother to the fetus takes place across the placenta. The mechanism for Cu transport across the placenta to the fetus has not been clearly elucidated. It is assumed that Cu transporter 1 (Ctr1), a Cu transporter in the plasma membrane, is responsible for the translocation across the apical membrane (Zhou & Gitschier, Reference Zhou and Gitschier1997). Virtually nothing is known about the transport mechanism for Cu once it is inside the placenta cells. Presumably it involves the same Cu chaperones as described for other tissues (for a recent review, see Prohaska & Gybina, Reference Prohaska and Gybina2004). One of these Cu chaperones, Atox1, binds Cu and carries Cu to either Menkes P-type Cu-ATPase 7A (ATP7A) or Wilson P-type Cu-ATPase 7B (ATP7B), depending on the tissue. In the placenta, both ATP7A and ATP7B are expressed, and their specific locations may be relevant to the paths followed by Cu through the placenta (Hardman et al., Reference Hardman, Manuelpillai, Wallace, van de Waasenburg, Cater, Mercer and Ackland2004).

The uptake of Fe into the placenta is through transferrin receptor-mediated endocytosis. In species with a haemochorial placenta such as rodents and man, Fe attached to transferrin binds to transferrin receptor on the brush-border membrane of the placenta where it is internalised in endosomes (McArdle et al., Reference McArdle, Douglas, Bowen and Morgan1985a, Reference McArdle, Douglas and Morganb). The endosomes are acidified and the Fe released. It moves into the cytoplasm, presumably via the divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1), and is carried across the placenta and into fetal circulation. The efflux is probably through Fe-regulated gene 1 (ferroportin) and the Fe-2+ is oxidised to Fe-3+ before incorporation into fetal transferrin by a ferroxidase similar, but not identical, to Cp (Danzeisen et al., Reference Danzeisen, Fosset, Page, David and McArdle2002). The different genes respond differently to Fe deficiency. There is an increase in expression of transferrin receptor 1 and the Fe-responsive element (IRE)-regulated form of DMT1. In contrast, the non-IRE-regulated form of DMT1 and ferroportin show no changes in expression levels (Gambling et al., Reference Gambling, Danzeisen, Gair, Lea, Charania, Solanky, Joory, Srai and McArdle2001).

Present data on the effect of mild Cu deficiency on maternal to fetal transport of Fe are contradictory. A study by Wapnir et al. (Reference Wapnir, Gyasi, Harper, Moyse and Teichberg1996) showed that fetal liver Fe levels increased when exposed to Cu-deficient diets, whereas another study reported a decrease (Ebesh et al., Reference Ebesh, Barone, Harper and Wapnir1999).

The purpose of the present study was to determine the effect of mild Cu deficiency on maternal and fetal Cu and Fe metabolism, growth and development. In order to understand the mechanism for any changes in fetal Cu and Fe metabolism we examined whether there was an altered expression of genes encoding the proteins of Cu and Fe transport in the placenta.

Methods

Experimental diets

The diets were based on dried egg albumin and conformed to American Institute of Nutrition guidelines for laboratory animals (American Institute of Nutrition, 1980). CuSO4 was added to achieve levels of added Cu of 5 (control diet), or 2·5 (50 % control Cu) and 0·75 mg Cu/kg (15 % control Cu) of diet. The diets were identical in all other respects. Fe concentration was held at 50 μg Fe/kg. Dietary ingredients were purchased from Mayjex Ltd (Chalfont St Peter, Bucks, UK), BDH Chemicals (Poole, Dorset, UK) or Sigma (Poole, Dorset, UK).

Experimental animals

All experimental procedures were approved by the Home Office and the Ethics Committee at the Rowett Research Institute and conducted in accordance with the UK animals (Scientific Procedures) Act, 1986. Experiments were performed using weanling female rats of the Rowett Hooded Lister strain, bred at the Rowett Research Institute. They were grouped housed in cages, under a 12 h light–dark cycle and with constant temperature and humidity. All animals were fed ad libitum and provided with distilled water.

Twenty-four female weanling rats were fed the control diet for 4 weeks, before being randomly assigned to one of the three diet treatments (eight rats per treatment), control or Cu-deficient diet having 50 and 15 % Cu levels compared with the control for 4 weeks before mating.

Tissue samples

On day 21 of gestation, the dams were killed by stunning and cervical dislocation. The numbers of fetuses and placentas were counted, and the number of resorption sites observed in the uterus was recorded. Placentas associated with healthy fetuses were weighed and frozen in liquid N2 before being stored at − 80°C. Fetal livers, hearts, kidneys, and lungs were collected from six fetuses, chosen from each mother at random, rapidly dissected, weighed and frozen in liquid N2. Livers, kidneys, spleen, hearts, lungs, pancreas, ovary and adrenals were dissected from all dams, weighed and frozen in liquid N2 before being stored at − 80°C. Maternal blood was collected in non-heparinised tubes and centrifuged at 1000 g, at 4°C, for 10 min. The resulting serum was stored in metal-free Eppendorf tubes (Axygen Scientific, Union City, CA, USA) at − 80°C.

Atomic absorption spectrophotometric analysis

Fe and Cu levels in maternal serum and in tissue from dams and fetuses were measured by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAnalyser6600; Perkin Elmer, Norwalk, CT, USA) according to standard procedures, as previously described (Gambling et al., Reference Gambling, Danzeisen, Gair, Lea, Charania, Solanky, Joory, Srai and McArdle2001). To differentiate between haeme and non-haeme Fe in the serum and tissue, samples were treated with 20 % (w/v) TCA, heated to 96°C for 5 min and the supernatant fraction collected as described previously (Gambling et al., Reference Gambling, Charania, Hannah, Antipatis, Lea and McArdle2002). Quality controls were included as necessary. Repeat measurements gave variance less than 15 %. Standards were obtained from BDH Laboratory Supplies (Poole, Dorset, UK). The laboratories are certified to ISO 9001.

Real-time quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction

Complementary DNA PCR primers for the rat were designed using Primer Express (version 1.5; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) software from DNA sequences obtained from GenBank (Table 1). All primer sets had a calculated annealing temperature of 58°C. Primers were synthesised by MWG Biotech (Ebersberg, Germany).

Table 1 Description of the primers used for real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis

DMT1, divalent metal transporter 1; IRE, Fe-responsive element; ATP7A, Menkes P-type Cu-ATPase 7A; ATP7B, Wilson P-type Cu-ATPase 7B.

* Coordinates according to the GenBank DNA sequence.

Total RNA was isolated from tissue following the method of Chomczynski & Sacchi (Reference Chomczynski and Sacchi1987) and treated with DNAse I (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany). First strand complementary DNA was synthesised by priming with hexamers using the Taqman RT Reagent Kit (Applied Biosystems). Reverse transcription was performed in 20 μl reactions using 200 ng of DNAse-treated RNA.

Real-time PCR amplification and analysis was performed using a 7700 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) and ABI prism software (version 1.9; Applied Biosystems). Reactions were performed in 25 μl volume with 300 nm primers and 5 μl cDNA. MgCl2, nucleotides, buffer and Taq DNA polymerase were included in the SYBR Green Master Mix (Applied Biosystems). Amplification specificity was assessed by agarose gel electrophoreses.

Standard curves were generated from increasing amount of cDNA made from total rat placenta control RNA. The CT values were used to calculate and plot a linear regression line by plotting the logarithm of template concentration (x-axis) against the CT value (y-axis). These regression lines were used to calculate the expression level (ng total RNA) for unknown samples. Data were normalised to the expression levels of 18 S. For comparison between groups, controls were taken as 100 %.

Ceruloplasmin assay

Maternal serum and placenta tissue from the control and 15 % Cu − groups were analysed for Cp oxidase activity. The placentas were homogenised in 0·02 m-N′-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid, 0·25 m-sucrose buffer with a homogeniser (Ultra Turrax T25; IKA Labortechnik, Stauful, Germany). The homogenates were fractionated into a membrane and soluble fraction by centrifugation at 50 000 rpm (108 000 g) at 4°C for 1 h. Cp oxidase activity (ferroxidase activity) was determined by measuring its p-phenylenediamine oxidase activity in the presence and absence of 150 mm-sodium azide (Sunderman et al., Reference Sunderman, Zaharia, Reid, Belliveau, O'Leary and Griffin1984; Gambling et al., Reference Gambling, Dunford and McArdle2004). Briefly, the samples were incubated in 200 mm-acetate buffer, pH 5·5, at 37°C for 1 h and read at 560 nm (ELx800 UV plate reader; Bio-Tek Instruments, Inc., Winooski, VT, USA). Human Cp (Vital Products, Boynton Beach, FL, USA) was used as a standard. Azide-sensitive ferroxidase activity was expressed as μg Cp/mg protein.

Statistics

For each dam, fetal data were averaged and the data recorded as a single point. All results are presented as mean values with their standard errors. A minimum of six measurements for each diet group was used for analysis. The effect of diet was assessed by one-way ANOVA and, as appropriate, either statistically or biologically, treatment means were also compared with a post hoc t test. Linear regression was used to look for relationships between Cu and Fe levels. Relationships between organ weight and body weight were investigated using allometric analysis (linear regression of (natural) log (organ weight) on log (body weight)). This approach was extended to investigate relationships between fetal organ weight, litter size, and maternal liver Cu concentrations by means of multiple linear regressions using (natural) log-transformed data.

For real-time PCR the change in expression between mRNA levels of the control group and the 50 and 15 % Cu-deficient groups were presented as the ratio of 18 S expressions in each particular sample. Each group contained amplified cDNA from five to eight animals, and the average of these measurements was used to calculate mean and sem. Significant differences between treated and control groups were determined using one-way ANOVA. Statistical analyses were performed in GenStat (8th edition, release 8.1; VSN International Ltd, Hemel Hempstead, Herts, UK).

Results

There was no effect of dietary treatment on body-weight gain of the dams, number of fetuses, resorption sites or packed cell volume (Table 2). In addition, no significant changes were observed for any of the maternal organs examined (based on allometry analysis with regression of log (organ weight) on log (body weight) +diet; data not shown).

Table 2 Effect of maternal copper deficiency in the rat on growth and fertility (Mean values with their standard errors; six to eight rats per group)

A significant (P < 0·001), diet-induced, decrease in maternal serum Cu levels was observed (Fig. 1(A)), together with a parallel decrease in Fe levels (Fig. 1(B); P = 0·020; r 2 0·35).

Fig. 1 (A) Maternal serum Cu concentration in pregnant female rats according to the Cu content of the maternal diet (eight rats per diet group). Values are means, with their standard errors represented by vertical bars. a,b,c Mean values with unlike letters were significantly different (P < 0·001; ANOVA). (B) Relationship between maternal serum Cu and Fe concentration in pregnant female rats (r 2 0·35; P = 0·020).

Maternal liver Cu levels were significantly (P < 0·001; r 2 0·59) decreased as levels in the diet were reduced (Fig. 2(A)). When comparing the dietary extremes of the control and the 15 % Cu, the maternal liver Fe level significantly increased (P = 0·033; two-tailed Mann–Whitney t test) (Fig. 2(B)).

Fig. 2 Maternal liver Cu (A), liver Fe (B), placenta Cu (C) and placenta Fe according to the Cu content of the maternal diet (eight rats per diet group). Values are means, with their standard errors represented by vertical bars. a,b Mean values with unlike letters were significantly different (P = 0·033; ANOVA).

Between the two extremes of dietary Cu, 5 mg/kg (control) and 0·75 mg/kg (15 % of control) Cu oxidase activity was significantly reduced in maternal serum and in the soluble fraction of the placenta (presumably representing serum contamination of the soluble fraction) (Table 3). Cu oxidase activity in the membrane fraction of the placenta did not change.

Table 3 Ceruloplasmin (Cp) activity in placenta and serum of gestational day 21 copper-deficient rats (Mean values with their standard errors of the mean; three to eight rats per group)

* Mean value was significantly different from that of the 5 mg/kg group (P < 0·05).

In other tissues, we measured both total and non-haeme Fe. Overall, the changes in maternal Cu status were reflected by alterations in both placental and fetal parameters. When comparing the dietary extremes of the control and the 15 % Cu, the placental Cu levels decreased (P = 0·043; two-tailed Mann–Whitney t test) (Fig. 2(C)) while there were no changes in either placental non-haeme (not shown) or total Fe (Fig. 2(D)). The fetal liver Cu (P = 0·003; r 2 0·40) and non-haeme Fe levels (P < 0·001; r 2 0·47) were significantly correlated to maternal Cu status (Figs. 3(A) and (B)).

Fig. 3 (A) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and fetal liver Cu (r 2 0·40; P = 0·003). (B) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and fetal liver non-haeme Fe (r 2 0·47; P < 0·001).

Data regarding the influence of maternal Cu deficiency on fetal development can be analysed in two ways: related to maternal dietary Cu intake or related to maternal liver Cu levels. We consider the latter approach more appropriate as it provides a better indicator for Cu status and have investigated the influence of maternal liver Cu concentration on fetal weight and organ weights, allowing for a correction for litter size (Fig. 4). There was a tendency to a reduced fetal weight with low maternal liver Cu levels (P = 0·053; data not shown). Maternal liver Cu levels were positively correlated to the organ weight of fetal liver (P = 0·023; r 2 0·26), lung (P = 0·022; r 2 0·26) and kidney (P = 0·040; r 2 0·21), which was lower for low maternal liver Cu concentration (Fig. 4). There was no alteration in relative heart size (P>0·1; data not shown).

Fig. 4 (A) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and Ln fetal liver weight (r 2 0·26; P = 0·023). (B) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and Ln fetal lung weight (r 2 0·26; P = 0·022). (C) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and Ln fetal kidney weight (r 2 0·21; P = 0·040).

Examination of genes involved in Cu and Fe metabolism revealed a change in expression levels of specifically genes involved in Fe metabolism. In the placenta, mRNA levels of transferrin receptor 1 were significantly increased (P = 0·0014; r 2 0·48) with decreasing maternal liver Cu levels (Fig. 5(A)).

Fig. 5 (A) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and placenta transferrin receptor mRNA (r 2 0·48; P = 0·0014). (B) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and placenta divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) (r 2 0·33; P = 0·013). (C) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and placenta non-Fe-responsive element (IRE) DMT1 (P = 0·39).

The expression of the two DMT1 transcripts, the Fe-responsive form (IRE)-regulated and non-IRE-regulated showed different patterns in the maternal placenta. The IRE-regulated transcript increased (P = 0·013; r 2 0·33) with decreasing levels of Cu (Fig. 5(B)), while the non-IRE-regulated form of DMT1 did not change (P = 0·39) (Fig. 5(C)). Ferroportin levels did not change significantly and there were no significant changes in the mRNA level of any of the Cu proteins examined, ATP7A and B, Ctr1, or Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase 1 (data not shown).

Discussion

The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of mild dietary Cu deficiency during pregnancy in rats on maternal growth, on pregnancy outcome and on Cu and Fe status of both the mothers and their fetuses. The data show that the severity of Cu deficiency had no effect on maternal growth and number of fetuses. The present results confirm previous data showing that Cu deficiency during pregnancy in the rat does not affect maternal outcome (Ebesh et al., Reference Ebesh, Barone, Harper and Wapnir1999).

Interestingly, we found that maternal liver Cu status affected fetal organ weight, and also tended to affect fetal body weight, with fetal liver, lung and kidney being reduced in weight as maternal liver Cu levels decreased. Allometry analyses indicated strong significant (P < 0·001; data not shown) linear relationships between the log-transformed organ weights and log-transformed fetal weight. In a previous study, no effect was seen in fetal organ weight (Ebesh et al., Reference Ebesh, Barone, Harper and Wapnir1999). One likely cause of the difference between the present study and the one by Ebesh et al. (Reference Ebesh, Barone, Harper and Wapnir1999) is that the latter fed rats a Cu-deficient diet (0·54–0·58 mg Cu/kg diet) only from gestational day 10 until delivery. Our protocol gave the dams a Cu-deficient diet for 7 weeks by the end of gestation. Data from the present study and from a recent publication (Andersen et al. Reference Andersen, Gambling, Holtrop and McArdle2006) suggest that growth might be regulated earlier on in pregnancy where major organ development occurs – a period during development not covered in the study by Ebesh et al. (Reference Ebesh, Barone, Harper and Wapnir1999). However, it should also be pointed out that the relationship between size and Cu content in the present study is dependent on correcting for litter size and, as will be apparent from Fig. 4, one particular data point at a maternal Cu content of about 2 μmol/g. We have no reason to exclude this point, but it does mean the present results should be treated with some caution.

Our model of mild maternal Cu deficiency causes significant changes in hepatic Cu and Fe levels, but maternal packed cell volume remains unchanged, suggesting only a mild state of Cu deficiency. Although placenta Fe levels appeared not to be affected by the reduced dietary intake of Cu, fetal liver Fe levels were reduced. Placental Fe would not be expected to change. It acts as a conduit for Fe. As such, the levels of Fe in the liver are a better indicator of transport activity than levels in the placenta itself. The effects of Cu on Fe metabolism were opposite in the mother and the fetus; maternal liver Fe increased, whereas fetal liver Fe content decreased. Our data show that the primary consequence of low dietary Cu is a compromised maternal to fetal transport of Cu and Fe. This finding is in agreement with previously published data by Ebesh et al. (Reference Ebesh, Barone, Harper and Wapnir1999).

The expression data in the placenta suggest that it is responding in the same way as it does to a directly induced Fe deficiency. We have previously shown that maternal Fe deficiency results in increased expression of transferrin receptor 1 and DMT1 and no change in ferroportin expression. In the present study we obtained the same results. The data also give some intriguing insights into the possible regulation of Fe transport. Hepcidin is a small peptide thought to be involved in the regulation of Fe absorption and in the regulation of systemic Fe metabolism. Its expression in the liver is proportional to Fe requirements (Mazur et al., Reference Mazur, Feillet-Coudray, Romier, Bayle, Gueux, Ruivard, Coudray and Rayssiguier2003). Given the increase in maternal liver Fe, therefore, one would expect an increase in hepcidin expression. This would result in a decrease in expression of transporters in the gut and, if maternal hepcidin regulated placental transport, the placenta. This is clearly not the case, as the expression of the placenta transporters increases, so we can conclude that maternal hepcidin is not involved in regulation of transplacental Fe transfer.

In contrast to Fe, regulation of Cu transport seems to occur primarily by altered location of the transport proteins. The mechanism for Cu transport across the placenta to the fetus has not been clearly elucidated. It is assumed that Ctr1, a Cu transporter in the plasma membrane, is responsible for the translocation across the apical membrane (Zhou & Gitschier, Reference Zhou and Gitschier1997). Ctr1 is expressed in the mammalian placenta (Gambling et al., Reference Gambling, Dunford and McArdle2004; Hardman et al., Reference Hardman, Manuelpillai, Wallace, Monty, Kramer, Kuo, Mercer and Ackland2006). The regulation of Ctr1 is tissue specific and dependent on Cu status (Bauerly et al., Reference Bauerly, Kelleher and Lonnerdal2005; Kuo et al., Reference Kuo, Gybina, Pyatskowit, Gitschier and Prohaska2006). The data presented here showed no changes in expression of Ctr1 mRNA levels in the placenta. The absence of changes in Ctr1 mRNA levels by dietary Cu deficiency is not unexpected. Studies in postnatal Cu-deficient rats showed no changes at the mRNA level in liver, intestine and hypothalamus (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Prohaska, Dagenais, Glover and Thiele2000; Kuo et al., Reference Kuo, Gybina, Pyatskowit, Gitschier and Prohaska2006) and a recent study using a placenta cell line (Jeg-3 cells) showed no change in Ctr1 protein level in cells cultured in media with increased or decreased Cu conditions (Hardman et al., Reference Hardman, Manuelpillai, Wallace, Monty, Kramer, Kuo, Mercer and Ackland2006). One important difference that must be taken into account when considering Cu or Fe status in the placenta in vivo in comparison with in vitro systems is that the placenta has a fetus attached, and hence fetal levels need to be considered for indicators of placental status. So, for example, it is not entirely surprising the Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase 1 levels are not changed, because the steady-state levels of Cu in the placenta are not significantly changed, but the total amount transferred by the tissue are significantly reduced.

Virtually nothing is known about the transport mechanism for Cu once it is inside the placental cell. Presumably it involves the same Cu chaperones as described for other tissues (for a review, see Prohaska & Gybina, Reference Prohaska and Gybina2004). Atox1 is a small Cu chaperone which has an essential role in delivering Cu to the Cu-ATPase ATP7A (Hamza et al., Reference Hamza, Faisst, Prohaska, Chen, Gruss and Gitlin2001). The Menkes (ATP7A) and Wilson (ATP7B) proteins are Cu-transporting ATPases that are defective in human Cu-deficiency disorders. The two proteins have different cellular localisation and it is possible that they have different functions in the placenta (Muramatsu et al., Reference Muramatsu, Yamada, Moralejo, Suzuki and Matsumoto1998; Hardman et al., Reference Hardman, Manuelpillai, Wallace, van de Waasenburg, Cater, Mercer and Ackland2004). The data presented here showed no changes in expression of Atox1, ATP7A or ATP7B mRNA levels in the placenta. The absence of changes in mRNA levels was not unexpected, as the two Cu-ATPases have been shown to be subjected to post-translational modification rather than transcriptional regulation by Cu (Paynter et al., Reference Paynter, Grimes, Lockhart and Mercer1994; Mercer & Llanos, Reference Mercer and Llanos2003).

Our data emphasise the importance of a sufficient intake of micronutrients, especially Cu and Fe, during pregnancy for the normal development of the baby. Deficiency in one micronutrient can lead to imbalances in nutritional status in others, with potentially serious consequences both in the short and in the long term for the offspring. We have shown, for example, that maternal Fe deficiency results in hypertension in the offspring, and the present data would imply a similar outcome for Cu deficiency. It becomes more important, therefore, to develop an accurate and specific suite of markers for the assessment of Cu status in women of childbearing age and especially in pregnancy.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Donna Wallace, Wilma Strachan and Kathleen Simpson of the Biological Resources Unit for their expert assistance in animal husbandry. The present study was supported by the International Copper Association, the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department (SEERAD) and the European Union (EARNEST). The authors have no competing financial interests.

References

American Institute of Nutrition (1980) Second report of the ad hoc committee on standards for nutritional studies. J Nutr 110, 1726.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, HS, Gambling, L, Holtrop, G & McArdle, HJ (2006) Maternal iron deficiency identifies critical windows for growth and cardiovascular development in the rat postimplantation embryo. J Nutr 136, G1171G1177.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bauerly, KA, Kelleher, SL & Lonnerdal, B (2005) Effects of copper supplementation on copper absorption, tissue distribution, and copper transporter expression in an infant rat model. Am J Physiol 288, G1007G1014.Google Scholar
Chomczynski, P & Sacchi, N (1987) Single-step method of RNA isolation by acid guanidinium thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform extraction. Anal Biochem 162, 156159.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Danzeisen, R, Fosset, C, Page, K, David, S & McArdle, HJ (2002) Placental ceruloplasmin homologue is regulated by iron and copper and is implicated in iron metabolism. Am J Physiol 282, C472C478.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ebesh, O, Barone, A, Harper, RG & Wapnir, RA (1999) Combined effect of high-fat diet and copper deficiency during gestation on fetal copper status in the rat. Biol Trace Elem Res 67, 139150.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gambling, L, Charania, Z, Hannah, L, Antipatis, C, Lea, RG & McArdle, HJ (2002) Effect of iron deficiency on placental cytokine expression and fetal growth in the pregnant rat. Biol Rep 66, 516523.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gambling, L, Danzeisen, R, Gair, S, Lea, RG, Charania, Z, Solanky, N, Joory, KD, Srai, SKS & McArdle, HJ (2001) Effect of iron deficiency on placental transfer of iron and expression of iron transport proteins in vivo and in vitro. Biochem J 356, 883889.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gambling, L, Dunford, S & McArdle, HJ (2004) Iron deficiency in the pregnant rat has differential effects on maternal and fetal copper levels. J Nutr Biochem 15, 366372.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hamza, I, Faisst, A, Prohaska, J, Chen, J, Gruss, P & Gitlin, JD (2001) The metallochaperone Atox1 plays a critical role in perinatal copper homeostasis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98, 68486852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardman, B, Manuelpillai, U, Wallace, EM, Monty, JF, Kramer, DR, Kuo, YM, Mercer, JF & Ackland, ML (2006) Expression, localisation and hormone regulation of the human copper transporter hCTR1 in placenta and choriocarcinoma Jeg-3 cells. Placenta 27, 968977.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hardman, B, Manuelpillai, U, Wallace, EM, van de Waasenburg, S, Cater, M, Mercer, JF & Ackland, ML (2004) Expression and localization of Menkes and Wilson copper transporting ATPases in human placenta. Placenta 25, 512517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, ZL, Klomp, LW & Gitlin, JD (1998) Aceruloplasminemia: an inherited neurodegenerative disease with impairment of iron homeostasis. Am J Clin Nutr 67, 972S977S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harris, ZL, Takahashi, Y, Miyajima, H, Serizawa, M, MacGillivray, RTA & Gitlin, JD (1995) Aceruloplasminemia: a molecular characterization of this disorder of iron metabolism. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92, 25392543.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
IOM (2001) Dietary reference intakes for vitamins and micronutrients. A report of the Panel for Micronutrients. Food and Nutrition Board, Institute of Medicine, Washington, DC: National Academy Press.Google Scholar
Keen, CL, Hanna, LA, Lanoue, L, Uriu-Adams, JY, Rucker, RB & Clegg, MS (2003) Developmental consequences of trace mineral deficiencies in rodents: acute and long-term effects. J Nutr 133, 1477S1480S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kuo, YM, Gybina, AA, Pyatskowit, JW, Gitschier, J & Prohaska, JR (2006) Copper transport protein (Ctr1) levels in mice are tissue specific and dependent on copper status. J Nutr 136, 2126.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lee, J, Prohaska, JR, Dagenais, SL, Glover, TW & Thiele, DJ (2000) Isolation of a murine copper transporter gene, tissue specific expression and functional complementation of a yeast copper transport mutant. Gene 254, 8796.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McArdle, HJ, Douglas, AJ, Bowen, BJ & Morgan, EH (1985) The mechanism of iron uptake by the rat placenta. J Cell Physiol 124, 446450.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McArdle, HJ, Douglas, AJ & Morgan, EH (1985) Uptake of transferrin and iron by cultured rat placental cells. J Cell Physiol 122, 405409.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Masters, DG, Keen, CL, Lonnerdal, B & Hurley, LS (1983) Comparative aspects of dietary copper and zinc deficiencies in pregnant rats. J Nutr 113, 14481451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mazur, A, Feillet-Coudray, C, Romier, B, Bayle, D, Gueux, E, Ruivard, M, Coudray, C & Rayssiguier, Y (2003) Dietary iron regulates hepatic hepcidin 1 and 2 mRNAs in mice. Metabolism 52, 12291231.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mercer, JF & Llanos, RM (2003) Molecular and cellular aspects of copper transport in developing mammals. J Nutr 133, 1481S1484S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Muramatsu, Y, Yamada, T, Moralejo, DH, Suzuki, Y & Matsumoto, K (1998) Fetal copper uptake and a homolog (Atp7b) of the Wilson's disease gene in rats. Res Commun Mol Pathol Pharmacol 101, 225231.Google Scholar
Paynter, JA, Grimes, A, Lockhart, P & Mercer, JF (1994) Expression of the Menkes gene homologue in mouse tissues lack of effect of copper on the mRNA levels. FEBS Lett 351, 186190.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Prohaska, JR & Brokate, B (2002) The timing of perinatal copper defic iency in mice influences offspring survival. J Nutr 132, 31423145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prohaska, JR & Gybina, AA (2004) Intracellular copper transport in mammals. J Nutr 134, 10031006.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sunderman, FW Jr, Zaharia, O, Reid, MC, Belliveau, JF, O'Leary, GP Jr & Griffin, H (1984) Effects of diethyldithiocarbamate and nickel chloride on glutathione and trace metal concentrations in rat liver. Toxicology 32, 1121.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vulpe, CD, Kuo, YM, Murphy, TL, Cowley, L, Askwith, C, Libina, N, Gitschier, J & Anderson, GJ (1999) Hephaestin, a ceruloplasmin homologue implicated in intestinal iron transport, is defective in the sla mouse. Nat Genet 21, 195199.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Waddell, J, Steenbock, H, Elvehjem, C & Hart, E (1927) Iron in nutrition V. Iron salts and iron containing ash extracts in the correction of anemia. J Biol Chem 77, 777795.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wapnir, RA, Gyasi, I, Harper, RG, Moyse, J & Teichberg, S (1996) Placental copper transport in the rat. II: Effect of maternal copper deficiency. Placenta 17, 479486.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wildman, RE, Hopkins, R, Failla, ML & Medeiros, DM (1995) Marginal copper-restricted diets produce altered cardiac ultrastructure in the rat. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 210, 4349.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhou, B & Gitschier, J (1997) hCTR1: a human gene for copper uptake identified by complementation in yeast. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94, 74817486.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1 Description of the primers used for real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis

Figure 1

Table 2 Effect of maternal copper deficiency in the rat on growth and fertility (Mean values with their standard errors; six to eight rats per group)

Figure 2

Fig. 1 (A) Maternal serum Cu concentration in pregnant female rats according to the Cu content of the maternal diet (eight rats per diet group). Values are means, with their standard errors represented by vertical bars. a,b,c Mean values with unlike letters were significantly different (P < 0·001; ANOVA). (B) Relationship between maternal serum Cu and Fe concentration in pregnant female rats (r2 0·35; P = 0·020).

Figure 3

Fig. 2 Maternal liver Cu (A), liver Fe (B), placenta Cu (C) and placenta Fe according to the Cu content of the maternal diet (eight rats per diet group). Values are means, with their standard errors represented by vertical bars. a,b Mean values with unlike letters were significantly different (P = 0·033; ANOVA).

Figure 4

Table 3 Ceruloplasmin (Cp) activity in placenta and serum of gestational day 21 copper-deficient rats (Mean values with their standard errors of the mean; three to eight rats per group)

Figure 5

Fig. 3 (A) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and fetal liver Cu (r2 0·40; P = 0·003). (B) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and fetal liver non-haeme Fe (r2 0·47; P < 0·001).

Figure 6

Fig. 4 (A) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and Ln fetal liver weight (r2 0·26; P = 0·023). (B) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and Ln fetal lung weight (r2 0·26; P = 0·022). (C) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and Ln fetal kidney weight (r2 0·21; P = 0·040).

Figure 7

Fig. 5 (A) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and placenta transferrin receptor mRNA (r2 0·48; P = 0·0014). (B) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and placenta divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) (r2 0·33; P = 0·013). (C) Relationship between maternal liver Cu and placenta non-Fe-responsive element (IRE) DMT1 (P = 0·39).