The effect of dietary zinc deficiency on the lipid composition of the rat erythrocyte membrane

Abstract
The effect of dietary zinc deficiency in the rat on the lipid composition of the erythrocyte membrane was determined. Weanling male Wistar rats were fed an egg whitebased diet containing ad libitum. Control rats were either pair-fed orad libitum-fed the basal diet suppelemented with 100 mg Zn/kg diet. A zinc refed group was fed the −Zn diet until day 18 and then pairfed the +Zn diet until day 21. The voluntary feed restriction associated with dietary zinc deficiency resulted in erythrocyte membranes that had depressed phospholipid/protein and elevated cholesterol/phospholipid ratios. Similarly, all feed restricted groups had elevated 22-carbon n−3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) and depressed 22-carbon n−6 PUFA concentrations in alkenylacyl and diacyl glycerophosphoethanolamine, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine; they also had depressed 24∶2n−6 levels in sphingomyelin. The relative concentrations of phospholipids in the membrane was similar between −Zn and +Zn (ad libitum) groups; however, the −Zn group had significantly less phosphatidylserine relative to +Zn (pair-fed) controls.