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Ovine and Bovine Metallothioneins: Accumulation and Depletion of Zinc in Various Tissues1

Philip D. Whanger, Sang-Hwan Oh2 and John T. Deagen

Department of Agricultural Chemistry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331

The accumulation and depletion of zinc in hepatic metallothionein (MT) and the accumulation of zinc with MT in various tissues were studied in the ovine and bovine species. It took 8 weeks for the accumulation of zinc to reach a plateau level of 270 µg in MT per gram liver when a bull was fed a diet containing 2,000 ppm zinc. The half-lives of zinc in hepatic MT were found to be 24.1 and 22.6 days when a steer and a ewe, respectively, which had been fed the basal diet with 2,000 ppm zinc were changed to the basal diet without added zinc. Although zinc accumulated with all cytosolic zinc proteins, it accumulated to the greatest extent with MT, followed by a low molecular weight (MW) compound. Zinc accumulated with this low MW compound mostly in kidney and pancreas, and this accumulation was much greater in bovine than in ovine tissues. In both lambs and cattle, excess zinc accumulated with MT in liver, kidneys, pancreas and small and large intestinal epithelia, but not with MT in heart, testes, rumen papillae, abomasum mucosa or choroid plexus (cattle) when they were fed high dietary levels of zinc.


KEY WORDS: • zinc • metallothioneins • ovine • bovine

1 Published with the approval of the Oregon State Agricultural Experiment Station as technical paper no. 5688. This work was supported by Public Health Service Research Grant no. AM 19285 from the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolism and Digestive Disease. This is the ninth paper of a series on the biological function of metallothionein.

2 Present address: Department of Biochemistry, College of Medicine, Yonsei University, P. O. Box 71, Seoul, Korea.

Manuscript received 12 December 1980.


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J ANIM SCIHome page
C. L. Wright, J. W. Spears, and K. E. Webb Jr
Uptake of zinc from zinc sulfate and zinc proteinate by ovine ruminal and omasal epithelia
J Anim Sci, June 1, 2008; 86(6): 1357 - 1363.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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