Does Dietary
Copper Supplementation Enhance or Diminish
PCB126 Toxicity in the Rodent Liver?
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Abstract
Copper
is essential for the function of the mitochondrial electron
transport chain and several antioxidant proteins. However, in its
free form copper can participate in Fenton-like reactions that produce
reactive hydroxyl radicals. Aryl-hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) agonists,
including the most potent polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congener,
3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl (PCB126), increase copper
levels in rodent livers. This is accompanied by biochemical and toxic
changes. To assess the involvement of copper in PCB toxicity, male
Sprague–Dawley rats were fed an AIN-93G diet with differing
dietary copper levels: low (2 ppm), adequate (6 ppm), and high (10
ppm). After three weeks, rats from each group were given a single
ip injection of corn oil (control), 1, or 5 μmol/kg body weight
PCB126. Two weeks following injections, biochemical and morphological
markers of hepatic toxicity, trace metal status, and hepatic gene
expression of metalloproteins were evaluated. Increasing dietary copper
was associated with elevated tissue levels of copper and ceruloplasmin.
In the livers of PCB126-treated rats, the hallmark signs of AhR activation
were present, including increased cytochrome P450 and lipid levels
and decreased glutathione. In addition, a doubling of hepatic copper
levels was seen, and overall metal homeostasis was disturbed, resulting
in decreased hepatic selenium, manganese, zinc, and iron. Expression
of key metalloproteins was either decreased (cytochrome <i>c</i> oxidase), unchanged (ceruloplasmin and CuZnSOD), or increased (tyrosinase
and metallothioneins 1 and 2) with exposure to PCB126. Increases in
metallothionein may contribute/reflect the increased copper seen.
Alterations in dietary copper did not amplify or abrogate the hepatic
toxicity of PCB126. PCB126 toxicity, i.e., oxidative stress and steatosis,
is clearly associated with disturbed metal homeostasis. Understanding
the mechanisms of this disturbance may provide tools to prevent liver
toxicity by other AhR agonists