Literature DB >> 9397184

Cadmium toxicity and distribution in metallothionein-I and -II deficient transgenic mice.

C C Conrad1, C A Walter, A Richardson, M A Hanes, D T Grabowski.   

Abstract

To date, numerous correlative studies have implicated metallothionein in the detoxification of heavy metals and in the regulation of metal distribution within an organism. In the present study cadmium-binding proteins (metallothionein equivalents), cadmium acute toxicity, and cadmium distribution in tissues and subcellular fractions were compared in metallothionein-I and -II deficient (MT-/-) mice and the parental strain carrying intact metallothionein genes (MT+/+) to determine if the absence of metallothionein altered any of these parameters. In an uninduced state, MT-/- mice expressed lower levels of cadmium-binding proteins relative to MT+/+ mice in several tissues. Administration of zinc enhanced the levels of cadmium-binding proteins in liver, small intestine, kidney, pancreas, and male sex organs, but not in cecum or brain of MT+/+ mice compared to zinc pretreated MT-/- mice. The cadmium LD50 was similar for MT-/-, MT+/+, and zinc-pretreated MT-/- mice (15-17 mumol CdCl2/kg body weight delivered i.p.). However, zinc-pretreated MT+/+ mice had a cadmium LD50 of 58-63 mumol CdCl2/kg body weight. Over two-thirds of cadmium was found in liver, cecum, small intestine, and kidney in both MT+/+ and MT-/- mice; therefore, metallothionein levels do not appear to play a major role in the tissue distribution of cadmium. However, after zinc pretreatment, MT+/+ mice accumulated more cadmium in the liver and less in other tissues, whereas the amount of cadmium in the liver was not altered by zinc pretreatment in MT-/- mice. In general, the cytosolic/particulate ratio of cadmium was significantly higher in tissues of noninduced MT+/+ mice relative to MT-/- mice. This difference was accentuated after zinc pretreatment. Together these results indicate that basal levels of metallothionein do not protect from the acute toxicity of a single i.p. cadmium challenge. Furthermore, it does not appear that the cytosolic compartmentalization of cadmium is correlated with reduced toxicity.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9397184     DOI: 10.1080/00984109708984079

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Toxicol Environ Health        ISSN: 0098-4108


  4 in total

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4.  Evaluation of zinc effect on cadmium action in lipid peroxidation and metallothionein levels in the brain.

Authors:  Marcos M Braga; Tuiskon Dick; Diogo L de Oliveira; Adriele Scopel-Guerra; Ben Hur M Mussulini; Diogo O Souza; João Batista T da Rocha
Journal:  Toxicol Rep       Date:  2015-06-05
  4 in total

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