4.4 Article

The time-dependent transport of chromium in adult rats from the bloodstream to the urine

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 383-393

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00775-005-0647-3

Keywords

chromium; chromodulin; transferrin; rat

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK62094-01] Funding Source: Medline

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While chromium was proposed to be an essential trace element over 40 years ago and if essential should possess a specific transport and distribution mechanism, the details of its transport from the bloodstream to the urine have not been elucidated. However, chromium is known to be maintained in the bloodstream bound to transferrin and to be excreted in the urine bound to the oligopeptide chromodulin or a similar chromodulin-like species. Injection of Cr-51-labeled transferrin into the bloodstream resulted in a rapid and insulin-sensitive movement of chromium into the tissues as Cr transferrin; greater than 50% of the Cr is transported to the tissues within 30 min. Tissue levels of Cr are maximal 30 min after injection; decreases in tissue Cr with time are mirrored by increases in urine Cr. Approximately 50% of the Cr-51 appears in the urine within 360 min of injection in the absence of added insulin; insulin treatment concurrent with injection of Cr-51-labeled transferrin results in approximately 80% of the label appearing in the urine within 180 min. The removal of Cr-51 from the blood is faster than the appearance of Cr-51 in the urine; the lag in time indicates that the Cr transferrin in the blood and Cr in the urine are not in direct equilibrium and that intermediates in the transport of Cr must be involved. This establishes a clear pathway of transport of Cr starting from transport by transferrin from the bloodstream into the tissues, followed by release and processing in the tissues to form chromodulin, excretion into the bloodstream, rapid clearance of chromodulin or a similar species into the urine, and ultimately excretion as this species. Insulin stimulates the processing of Cr in the tissues.

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