pubmed-article:6308192 | pubmed:abstractText | Chronic copper deficiency in mice impairs both humoral and cell-mediated immunity, but the mechanisms are unknown. Copper deficiency was produced in C58 mice by feeding dams a diet low in copper throughout lactation and weaning the pups to this diet. Control mice were from dams fed the same diet but with copper supplementation the drinking water. Six-week-old mice were sampled for biochemical and morphological studies. Compared to copper-supplemented mice, copper-deficient animals were smaller, anemic and exhibited hypoceruloplasminemia. The copper-deficient mice have small thymus glands, enlarged spleens, and livers equivalent in size to copper-supplemented mice. Thymic atrophy is not caused by elevated serum corticosterone. Liver, spleen, and thymus tissues from copper-deficient mice exhibit low cytochrome oxidase (56, 38, and 45%, respectively) and superoxide dismutase activities (61, 60, and 43%, respectively) compared to tissues from copper-supplemented mice, indicating a functional copper deficiency. Electron micrographs taken of thymus and spleen from copper-deficient mice demonstrate altered morphology characterized by abnormal mitochondria and misshapen nuclei. Chronic copper deficiency alters the size, biochemistry and morphology of primary (thymus) and secondary (spleen) lymphoid tissue. | lld:pubmed |