Abstract

Breast milk normally contains adequate zinc to meet infant requirements up to six months of age; however, transient neonatal zinc deficiency has been documented in exclusively breastfed infants of women with low milk zinc concentration. This condition is not corrected by maternal zinc supplementation, supporting the speculation that it results from an inherited genetic condition. We identified a family in which two exclusively breast-fed infants developed zinc deficiency that was associated with low milk zinc concentration in both women. Sequencing of genomic DNA detected a mis-sense mutation (Ade-->Gua) that substitutes a conserved histidine at amino acid 54 with arginine (H54R) in SLC30A2 (ZnT-2) that is present in both affected subjects and several other siblings. Gene knockdown of SLC30A2 in mammary epithelial cells reduced zinc secretion, illustrating the role of ZnT-2 in zinc secretion from this cell type. Expression of the H54R mutant in human embryonic kidney-293 cells resulted in reduced zinc secretion as a consequence of perinuclear, aggresomal accumulation, whereas co-expression of the H54R mutant and wild-type ZnT-2 did not abrogate increased zinc secretion in cells overexpressing wild-type ZnT-2 alone. Together, these data provide evidence that low milk zinc concentration in some women is a consequence of a genetic disorder resulting from a mutation in SLC30A2 and can result in neonatal zinc deficiency if unrecognized. Further studies are needed to evaluate the incidence and penetrance of this mutation in the human population.

Highlights

  • Condition and elegantly highlights the interplay between genetics and nutrition

  • Zinc deficiency is believed to result primarily from low dietary zinc intake or impaired zinc bioavailability, two genetic disorders in mammalian zinc metabolism that result in severe zinc deficiency have previously been identified

  • Results from this study and others [7] indicate that neither of these genetic abnormalities are responsible for transient neonatal zinc deficiency in humans

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Summary

Introduction

Condition (zinc in breast milk, reduced; OMIM 608118) and elegantly highlights the interplay between genetics and nutrition. We identified a missense mutation in SLC30A2 in affected members of a family with low milk zinc concentration and demonstrated that the mutation results in perinuclear, aggresomal accumulation of the mutated form of ZnT-2 and reduced zinc secretion from transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells, indicating that a mutation in SLC30A2 may be responsible for at least some cases of transient neonatal zinc deficiency in humans.

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