Response of liver and heart trace elements in rats to the interaction between dietary zinc and iron

被引:1
|
作者
Zaslavsky B. [1 ]
Uthus E.O. [2 ]
机构
[1] FDA/CBER HFM-217, Rockville, MD 20852-1448
[2] USDA, ARS, Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, Grand Forks, ND 58202-9034
关键词
Analysis of variance; Discriminant analysis; Interaction; Iron; Zinc;
D O I
10.1385/BTER:88:2:165
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
An analysis of the interaction between dietary iron (Fe) and zinc (Zn) was performed by using data from Sprague-Dawley rats in a 5 × 4 fully crossed factorially arranged experiment. The concentrations of 9 trace elements from the liver and 10 from the heart were determined and subjected to diverse statistical analyses and were classified by their response to the interaction between dietary Fe and Zn. The interaction was studied by using analysis of variance (ANOVA), discriminant analysis, and logistic regression to determine the direction of interaction; that is, did dietary Fe affect dietary Zn or did dietary Zn affect dietary Fe? The use of discriminant analysis allowed for using multiple parameters (rather than a single parameter) to determine possible interactions between Fe and Zn. Thus, two main levels of interaction were studied: the separate response of each tissue mineral and the response of some grouped minerals. The responses studied were the effect of dietary Zn on tissue trace element parameters, the effect of dietary Fe on the parameters, the effect of dietary Zn on combined (grouped) parameters, and the effect of dietary Fe on combined parameters. As determined by ANOVA, only three individual trace elements - liver Fe, Cu, and Mo - were significantly affected by the interaction between Fe and Zn. However, a broader interaction between Fe and Zn is revealed when groups of, rather than single, trace elements are studied. For example, an interaction between dietary Fe and Zn affects the weighted linear combination of heart Ca, Cu, K, Mg, Mn, P, and Zn. This article presents the hypothesis that grouped parameters may be useful as status indicators. The complete dataset can be found at http://www.gfhnrc.ars.usda.gov/fezn.
引用
收藏
页码:165 / 183
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Interaction between trace elements: Selenium and cadmium ions
    Badiello, R
    Feroci, G
    Fini, A
    JOURNAL OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 1996, 10 (03) : 156 - 162
  • [32] ENZYMES IN THE LIVER OF RATS EXPOSED TO FEW TRACE-ELEMENTS
    RANA, SVS
    TOXICOLOGY LETTERS, 1980, : 210 - 210
  • [33] INTERACTIONS BETWEEN TRACE-ELEMENTS AND ALCOHOL IN RATS
    DREOSTI, IE
    CIBA FOUNDATION SYMPOSIA, 1984, 105 : 103 - 116
  • [34] STUDIES ON INTERACTIONS BETWEEN THE TRACE-ELEMENTS ZINC AND MANGANESE
    SCHWARZ, FJ
    KIRCHGESSNER, M
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR TIERPHYSIOLOGIE TIERERNAHRUNG UND FUTTERMITTELKUNDE-JOURNAL OF ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY AND ANIMAL NUTRITION, 1980, 43 (4-5): : 272 - 282
  • [35] EFFECT OF DIETARY TIN ON ZINC, COPPER AND IRON UTILIZATION BY RATS
    GREGER, JL
    JOHNSON, MA
    FOOD AND COSMETICS TOXICOLOGY, 1981, 19 (02): : 163 - 166
  • [36] DIETARY PHYTATE AND LIVER IRON REPLETION IN IRON-DEPLETED RATS
    LIEBMAN, M
    DRISKELL, J
    NUTRITION REPORTS INTERNATIONAL, 1979, 19 (03): : 281 - 287
  • [37] EFFECT OF EXCESS DIETARY ZINC ON TISSUE STORAGE OF IRON IN RATS
    ONEILCUTTING, MA
    BOMFORD, A
    MUNRO, HN
    JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 1981, 111 (11): : 1969 - 1979
  • [38] Effect of dietary caffeine and zinc on the activity of antioxidant enzymes, zinc, and copper concentration of the heart and liver in fast-growing rats
    Rossowska, MJ
    Ghanaei, P
    Nakamoto, T
    BIOLOGICAL TRACE ELEMENT RESEARCH, 1995, 50 (03) : 229 - 236
  • [39] BIOEVALUATION OF DIETARY IRON IN GROWING RATS .2. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN IRON LEVEL IN A SEMOLINA DIET AND RESPONSE OF GROWING RATS
    AHLSTROM, A
    KOIVISTOINEN, P
    SALONIEMI, R
    SALO, P
    NUTRITIO ET DIETA, 1968, 10 (04): : 254 - +
  • [40] Interaction Between Dietary Selenium and Zinc Intakes on Hypothyroidism
    Lu, Lei
    Huang, Zhiqi
    Wang, Xinyang
    Chen, Jinpeng
    BIOLOGICAL TRACE ELEMENT RESEARCH, 2023, 201 (10) : 4667 - 4676