| Literature DB >> 7223884 |
C C McCormick, M P Menard, R J Cousins.
Abstract
Induction of hepatic metallothionein was investigated in zinc-depleted rats after a single feeding (via stomach tube) of a complete diet with or without supplemental zinc. Subsequent to a maximum elevation in serum zinc (3.25 micrograms/ml) at 3 h, the rate of metallothionein synthesis increased 4.5-fold by 10 h after feeding. Changes in the rate of metallothionein synthesis coincided with similar changes in the level of translatable mRNA coding for metallothionein. Accumulation in liver of Zn2+ as metallothionein rose to a maximum by 12 h after diet administration and thereafter remained constant. Radioactive zinc (65Zn) included in the diet rapidly associated with newly formed metallothionein. Unlike Zn2+, 65Zn exhibited marked fluctuations within the 24-h period following feeding, indicating that zinc associated with metallothionein may be capable of exchange and/or dissociation. Changes in total liver 65Zn were accompanied by concomitant changes in metallothionein-bound 65Zn. This study has related (temporally) the metabolism of dietary zinc to the induction, apparently via transcription of mRNA, of hepatic metallothionein.Entities:
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Year: 1981 PMID: 7223884 DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.1981.240.4.E414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol ISSN: 0002-9513