Abstract

Dietary copper restriction in rats results in cardiomyopathy. In rats fed copper-restricted diets from weaning for 5 to 8 weeks, a concentric hypertrophy is apparent, whereas postweaning copper restriction does produce cardiomyopathy without apparent hypertrophy. Both sets of circumstances appear to affect the integrity of the basal laminae of cardiac myocytes and capillaries. In rats fed copper-restricted diets from weaning, decreases in cytochrome c oxidase are related not only to copper's role as a coenzyme, but also to a marked decrease in the nuclear encoded subunits of the enzyme complex. Decreased levels of the δ-subunit of ATP synthase have been observed. However, such aberrations in mitochondrial enzymes, as well as morphologic alterations, apparently do not affect cardiac levels of ATP. This review suggests mechanisms of cardiac adaptation and initiation factors leading to cardiac hypertrophy. We present a hypothetical working model explaining the events leading to cardiac failure in the copper-deficient rat heart based on the present body of knowledge, and compare the pathology with other models of cardiomyopathies.

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