4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Differential gene expression after zinc supplementation and deprivation in human leukocyte subsets

Journal

MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 7-8, Pages 362-370

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.2119/2007-00049.Haase

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An individual's zinc status has a significant impact on the immune system, and zinc deficiency, as well as supplementation, modulates immune function. To investigate the effects of zinc on different leukocyte subsets, we used microarray technology to analyze and compare the changes in mRNA expression in cell culture models of monocytes (THP-1), I cells (Jurkat), and B cells (Raji), in response to supplementation for 40 h with 50 mu M zinc or 2.5 mu M of the membrane-permeant zinc chelator TPEN (N,N,N',N'- tetra kis-(2-pyridyl- methyl)ethylenediamine), respectively. In each cell type, several hundred genes were identified to be zinc sensitive, but only a total of seven genes were commonly regulated in all three cell lines. The majority of those genes were involved in zinc homeostasis, and none in immune function. Nevertheless, further analysis revealed that zinc affects entire functional networks of genes that are related to proinflammatory cytokines and cellular survival, Although the zinc-regulated activities are similar throughout the gene networks, the specific genes that are affected vary significantly between different cell types, a situation that helps to elucidate the disparity of the effects that zinc has on different leukocyte populations.

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