Plasma ceruloplasmin Evidence for its presence in and uptake by heart and other organs of the rat

Evidence for the presence of the plasma protein, ceruloplasmin, in heart and other tissues of the rat was sought using various techniques. With p-phenylenediamine, ceruloplasmin-like oxidase activity was detected in heart postmitochondrial and 100 000 × g supernatants in amounts far exceeding those...

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Published inBiochimica et biophysica acta Vol. 499; no. 3; pp. 329 - 336
Main Authors Linder, Maria C., Moor, Joan R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 25.10.1977
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Summary:Evidence for the presence of the plasma protein, ceruloplasmin, in heart and other tissues of the rat was sought using various techniques. With p-phenylenediamine, ceruloplasmin-like oxidase activity was detected in heart postmitochondrial and 100 000 × g supernatants in amounts far exceeding those that could be accounted for by residual blood. Much lower levels were detected in kidney, brain and liver. Oxidase activity of heart purified on DEAE-cellulose in the same way as rat plasma ceruloplasmin and behaved identically also in disc gel electrophoresis. The presence of ceruloplasmin in heart extracts was confirmed immunologically by Ouchterlony diffusion, using rabbit antibody raised against pure rat ceruloplasmin. When pure [ 3H]leucin-labeled ceruloplasmin was infused intravenously into a copper-deficient rat, radioactivity was concentrated in the heart and brain within 2 h; radioactive counts per g attained 11 and 3 times those of plasma in the two organs, respectively. A lesser concentration occurred in the liver. The results suggest that circulating ceruloplasmin (made by the liver) finds its way into the cells of some organs, especially the heart, a phenomenon which may be related to the function of ceruloplasmin to provide copper to the cytochrome oxidase of various tissues.
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ISSN:0304-4165
0006-3002
1872-8006
DOI:10.1016/0304-4165(77)90064-2