| Health Center Home Nutrition and Brain FunctionMetals Essential to the Brain's Hardwiring
 The standard element for moving telecommunications signals across phone wires is copper. Key bioactive 
enzymes and proteins in the brain also depend on copper to function. At least one copper-dependent enzyme 
supports the formation of neurotransmitters that allow brain cells to "talk" to one another.
 Associations between copper deficiency and impaired brain function were noted nearly 75 years ago. 
The owner of a sheep station in Australia found that his lambs had become uncoordinated to the point of 
falling. Eventually, it was found that the lambs - all of which died-were born from mothers that had been
 pastured during pregnancy on forage with extremely low copper content. Dietary Copper Traffic Many proteins and enzymes depend on copper for their catalytic activity. Some contain copper, and 
some are affected by the presence or absence of sufficient copper. Some proteins act as escorts that 
deliver copper to copper-containing enzymes in the brain. These enzymes will not function properly 
with insufficient copper. In exploring abnormal brain development and function, ARS researchers have been looking at changes in 
two copper-dependent enzymes in particular: cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) and dopamine-B-monooxygenase (DBM).
These enzymes function within the brain's billions of nerve cells, or neurons. GFHNRC studies have found that the activity of various copper-containing enzymes is lower in rats 
subjected to copper deficiency during either pre- or postnatal brain development-with varying outcomes.
 CCO, for example, contains about 20 percent of the rat brain's total copper content. It is involved in 
what's called the "electron transport chain" -a critical aerobic pathway producing energy in the body. "The electron transport chain is involved in mitochondrial energy production," says Johnson. 
Impaired CCO activity-associated with copper deficiency-can damage rat brain mitochondria and their critical 
metabolic pathways. An early GFHNRC animal study led by biologist Curtiss Hunt showed that even 
moderate copper deprivation in pregnant rats led to underdevelopment of memory-control areas of their 
pups' developing brains. The study rats were fed low-copper diets during gestation, lactation, or both. 
Their pups-when compared to pups born to mothers fed copper-sufficient diets-exhibited slowed development
 of the dentate gyrus and hippocampal areas of their brains. These areas are important for higher brain 
 functions, such as learning. More recently, now-retired GFHNRC psychologist James Penland participated in an animal study with lead 
author and copper expert Joseph R. Prohaska at the University of Minnesota-Duluth. Their tests showed 
that rat pups from mothers made copper-deficient during pregnancy never achieved their full motor 
function. Penland was also interested in the effects of diminished DBM activity. DBM contains just a 
fraction of 1 percent of the brain's copper content, but it catalyzes an important reaction: formation 
of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine from dopamine. "A deficiency of norepinephrine during critical 
brain development might decrease synaptic connections and, thus, the maturing process of brain cells," 
says Penland. "That could affect behavioral and motor responses." Two major factors have been found to lead to impaired motor and brain function due to copper deficiency 
in laboratory animals: the timing and the degree of the deficiency. For example, during gestation, 
neonatal genes are turned on or off in response to various factors, such as maternal diet and nutrition. 
This "nutritional programming" can affect susceptibility to health risks later in life. Research on nutritional programming is part of Life Stage Nutrition and Metabolism, one of four new 
research components within the ARS Human Nutrition national program, according to Molly Kretsch, the 
program's leader. "Our animal model studies suggest that levels of copper intake are critical during pregnancy," says
 Johnson. "The effects of low copper intake are very subtle and might not be seen until offspring are 
 in their adult years." The Zinc-Think Connection During the last several decades, scientists have also demonstrated the effects of zinc deficiency on 
brain function and mental performance. 
 Penland conducted a study at GFHNRC that examined the effects of restricted zinc intakes on the 
neuropsychological functions of 11 men. For the study, neither the researchers nor the volunteers 
knew which participants received specific quantities of dietary zinc. The volunteers' diets were 
closely controlled to limit confounding of test variables. In random order, the men were fed one of four relatively low amounts of zinc daily for 35 days: either 
1, 2, 3, or 4 milligrams (mg). Then they were given adequate zinc (10 mg) for 35 days. Before-and-after 
cognitive and psychomotor task tests showed that the men's performance-while on any of the four low-zinc 
diets-deteriorated in 9 out of 15 tasks. The study was described in "Zinc Nutriture as Related to Brain," a chapter Penland coauthored for the 
book Trace Elements in Man and Animals 10. Penland also conducted a study of the effects of zinc nutrition in adolescents. He found that seventh graders 
given 20 mg of zinc 5 days a week for 10 to 12 weeks responded more quickly and accurately and had more sustained 
attention than classmates who received no additional zinc.
"The beneficial effects were seen regardless of the youngsters? previous zinc status," says Penland. Adequate amounts of copper and zinc are clearly important to overall health and brain function. But the 
idea that "a little is good, so a lot must be better" does not apply. The human body regulates copper so
 that it does not accumulate to unsafe levels. But zinc competes with copper for absorption sites in the 
 intestine, and too much zinc can affect copper levels. Even though copper deficiency is not generally a public health concern in the United States, 8 to 16 
percent of childbearing-age women had inadequate copper intake, according to ARS national food-intake 
survey data from 2001 and 2002. "A balanced diet containing a variety of nutritious foods is always the best approach," says Johnson. - By 
Rosalie Marion Bliss, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
 This research is part of Human Nutrition, an ARS national program (#107) described on the World Wide Web
 at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.W. Thomas Johnson is with the USDA-ARS Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, 2420 2nd Ave., N., 
Grand Forks, ND 58202-9034; phone (701) 795-8411, fax (701) 795-8395. Sources: "Nutrition and Brain Function" was published in the September 2007 issue of Agricultural Research 
magazine. National Agricultural Library, Agricultural Research Service, U. S. Department of agriculture.
 See also: 
Part 1 - Nutrition and Brain Function
 Adapted by  Editorial Staff, October 2007Last update, August 2008
 |