Comparison of angiotensin-converting enzyme, malonaldehyde, zinc, and copper levels in preeclampsia
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a syndrome of unknown etiopathogenesis. Recent
studies carried out on preeclampsia have focused on the increase in free
radicals in the feto-placental unit with poor perfusion. It is believed that
the renin–angiotensin system (RAS) has a role in the poor perfusion of the
placenta. It is uncertain whether there is a pre-existing impairment in RAS
in pre-eclamptic pregnant women or not. In the present study, we measured
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), malonaldehyde (MDA), zinc,
and copper levels in the placental tissue of 16 pre-eclamptic pregnant
women and compared them with those in 20 healthy pregnant women.
Whereas ACE activity and MDA were found to be high in the placentas
of pre-eclamptic patients, zinc and copper levels were low and there was
a negative correlation between ACE activity and zinc concentration. These
findings suggest that high ACE activity might play a role in the increase in
tissue hypoxia and consequent lipid peroxidation through vasoconstriction;
zinc deficiency in the placental tissue might cause insufficiency of superoxide
dismutase, an antioxidant enzyme. Furthermore, deficiency in placental
zinc also plays a role in the biosynthesis of connective tissue, maintaining its
integrity, which might have an impact on the structure of the spiral arteries.