Abstract

The essential trace metals iron, zinc, and copper have a significant physiological role in healthy brain development and function. Especially zinc is important for neurogenesis, synaptogenesis, synaptic transmission and plasticity, and neurite outgrowth. Given the key role of trace metals in many cellular processes, it is important to maintain adequate levels in the brain. However, the physiological concentration of trace metals, and in particular zinc, in the human and animal brain is not well described so far. For example, little is known about the trace metal content of the brain of animals outside the class of mammals. Here, we report the concentration of iron, zinc, and copper in fresh brain tissue of different model-species of the phyla Chordata (vertebrates (mammals, fish)), Annelida, Arthropoda (insects), and Mollusca (snails), using inductively coupled plasma mass-spectrometry (ICP-MS). Our results show that the trace metals are present in the nervous system of all species and that significant differences can be detected between species of different phyla. We further show that a region-specific distribution of metals within the nervous system already exists in earthworms, hinting at a tightly controlled metal distribution. In line with this, the trace metal content of the brain of different species does not simply correlate with brain size. We conclude that although the functional consequences of the controlled metal homeostasis within the brain of many species remains elusive, trace metal biology may not only play an important role in the nervous system of mammals but across the whole animal kingdom.

Highlights

  • The human body is in need of the essential trace metals iron, zinc, copper, manganese, cobalt, and molybdenum [1,2]

  • Our results show that the concentrations of the measured trace metals within the fresh frozen cerebral cortex of rats and fixed cortex trace metals within the fresh cortex of rats and fixed cortextoare are different

  • The results show that iron was the ganglia that contain nerve cells, we first prepared the head ganglion of earthworms and the nerve highest traceeach element measured in segment earthworms andworm copper the lowestThe in both head ganglion andwas nerve cord with ganglion in each of the separately

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Summary

Introduction

The human body is in need of the essential trace metals iron, zinc, copper, manganese, cobalt, and molybdenum [1,2]. The status of chromium is still debated. Cobalt occurs mostly as cobalamin (Vitamin B12) and molybdenum is only needed for three enzymes as far as known [3,4,5,6,7,8]. Cobalt, molybdenum, and manganese, occur at very low concentrations. Iron is the trace metal with the highest concentration, followed by zinc and copper [9,10,11,12]. Most iron is contributed by heme-bound iron in hemoglobin of red blood

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