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The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.

Wistar rats were given drinking water containing 250 ppm Cd for 12 months. After excision of the kidney and liver, the organs were subfractionated into nuclear, mitochondrial, microsomal and cytosol fractions, and the chemical forms of Cd in the subcellular fractions were examined. Although approxim...

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Autor principal: Waku, K
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1984
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568173/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6376094
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author Waku, K
author_facet Waku, K
author_sort Waku, K
collection PubMed
description Wistar rats were given drinking water containing 250 ppm Cd for 12 months. After excision of the kidney and liver, the organs were subfractionated into nuclear, mitochondrial, microsomal and cytosol fractions, and the chemical forms of Cd in the subcellular fractions were examined. Although approximately 90% of the total Cd was present in the cytosol, in the form of metallothionein, 3-5% was also present in the mitochondrial fraction and 5-7% in the microsomal fraction from both organs. By Sephadex G-75 gel filtration, after solubilizing the particulate fractions with sodium deoxycholate, approximately 89% of Cd in the microsomal fraction and 94% in the mitochondrial fraction eluted with the same retention time as that of metallothionein in both liver and kidney, while the remainder was found in a high molecular weight protein fraction. The Cd that eluted with the high molecular protein fraction may be involved in dysfunction in subcellular organelles. For estimating the toxicity of Cd associated with the high molecular weight fraction, rat liver microsomes and CdCl2 were mixed with 1% of sodium deoxycholate and the protein-Cd complex produced was isolated by eluting with Sephadex G-75. This complex had a strong toxicity toward the alcohol dehydrogenase activity (SH-enzyme), and the Ki values of the Cd-protein complexes decreased with increased amount of Cd bound to the microsomal protein fraction. The above results suggest that loosely bound Cd increased in the case of higher Cd/protein and plays a toxic role in the living cells.
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spelling pubmed-15681732006-09-18 The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure. Waku, K Environ Health Perspect Research Article Wistar rats were given drinking water containing 250 ppm Cd for 12 months. After excision of the kidney and liver, the organs were subfractionated into nuclear, mitochondrial, microsomal and cytosol fractions, and the chemical forms of Cd in the subcellular fractions were examined. Although approximately 90% of the total Cd was present in the cytosol, in the form of metallothionein, 3-5% was also present in the mitochondrial fraction and 5-7% in the microsomal fraction from both organs. By Sephadex G-75 gel filtration, after solubilizing the particulate fractions with sodium deoxycholate, approximately 89% of Cd in the microsomal fraction and 94% in the mitochondrial fraction eluted with the same retention time as that of metallothionein in both liver and kidney, while the remainder was found in a high molecular weight protein fraction. The Cd that eluted with the high molecular protein fraction may be involved in dysfunction in subcellular organelles. For estimating the toxicity of Cd associated with the high molecular weight fraction, rat liver microsomes and CdCl2 were mixed with 1% of sodium deoxycholate and the protein-Cd complex produced was isolated by eluting with Sephadex G-75. This complex had a strong toxicity toward the alcohol dehydrogenase activity (SH-enzyme), and the Ki values of the Cd-protein complexes decreased with increased amount of Cd bound to the microsomal protein fraction. The above results suggest that loosely bound Cd increased in the case of higher Cd/protein and plays a toxic role in the living cells. 1984-03 /pmc/articles/PMC1568173/ /pubmed/6376094 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Waku, K
The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
title The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
title_full The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
title_fullStr The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
title_full_unstemmed The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
title_short The chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
title_sort chemical form of cadmium in subcellular fractions following cadmium exposure.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568173/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6376094
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