Swick RA et al: The effect of consumption of the pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plant Senecio jacobaea on iron and copper metabolism in the rat
Autor
Nachricht
Flora Admin & Mod
Anzahl der Beiträge : 11029 Anmeldedatum : 10.07.11 Alter : 39 Ort : Pfalz
Thema: Swick RA et al: The effect of consumption of the pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plant Senecio jacobaea on iron and copper metabolism in the rat 05.10.14 21:15
Swick RA, Cheeke PR, Miranda CL, Buhler DR.: The effect of consumption of the pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plant Senecio jacobaea on iron and copper metabolism in the rat. In: J Environ Pathol Toxicol Oncol. 1984 Jul.
Link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6520740
Zitat :
Abstract The effect of dietary tansy ragwort (Senecio jacobaea), a pyrrolizidine alkaloid (PA)-containing plant, on mineral metabolism in rats was studied. In experiment 1, rats were fed a dietary level of 5% tansy ragwort. At intervals of 1, 2, 4, 6 and 8 weeks animals were killed and tissue mineral levels determined. As compared to comparable controls, rats fed tansy ragwort showed by 6 weeks elevated liver and spleen copper and iron levels. Experiment 2 was a 3 X 4 factorial experiment with added dietary copper levels of 0, 50 and 250 ppm, and tansy ragwort levels of 0, 1, 2.5 and 5%. Liver copper levels increased markedly with increasing levels of tansy ragwort; at 0, 50 and 250 ppm added copper, liver copper levels were 4, 18 and 21 times greater in rats fed 5% tansy ragwort as compared to those with no tansy ragwort. Increases in liver iron and spleen copper were noted with consumption of tansy ragwort. Higher liver copper levels were observed when a casein-based diet rather than a soybean meal diet was used, suggesting an effect of phytate in soybean meal in reducing copper absorption. In the last experiment, 59Fe was administered to rats fed diets with or without tansy ragwort. After 5 weeks on tansy ragwort, rats showed very low levels of 59Fe in erythrocytes, tibia and liver, and elevated levels in spleen and kidney, suggesting either an impairment of hematopoesis or accelerated erythrocyte destruction as a result of PA consumption. These results indicate that PA's cause increased liver copper content, and disturbances in iron metabolism.
Swick RA et al: The effect of consumption of the pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plant Senecio jacobaea on iron and copper metabolism in the rat