Abstract

In two fully crossed, three-way, two by three by three, factorially arranged experiments, female weanling rats were fed a basal diet supplemented with iron at 15 and 45 μg/g, nickel at 0, 5, and 50 μg/g and copper at 0, 0.5, and 5 μg/g (Expt. 1) or 0, 0.25, and 12 μg/g (Expt. 2). Expt. 1 was terminated at 11 weeks, and Expt. 2 at 8 weeks because, at those times, some rats fed no supplemental copper and the high level of nickel began to lose weight, or die from heart rupture. The experiments showed that nickel interacted with copper and this interaction was influenced by dietary iron. If copper deficiency was neither very severe or mild, copper deficiency signs of elevated levels of total lipids and lipid phosphorus in liver and plasma, and cholesterol in plasma, were made more severe by supplemental dietary nickel. Rats in which nickel supplementation exacerbated copper deficiency did not exhibit a depressed level of copper in liver and plasma. Also, although iron deprivation enhanced the interaction between nickel and copper, iron deprivation did not significantly depress the level of copper in liver and plasma. The findings confirmed that, in rats, a complex relationship exists between nickel, copper, and iron, thus indicating that both the iron and copper status of experimental animals must be controlled before data about nickel nutriture and metabolism can be compared among studies.

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