The regulatory roles of liver and kidney in cobalamin (vitamin-B₁₂) metabolism in the rat: the uptake and intracellular binding of cobalamin and the activity of the cobalamin-dependent enzymes in response to varying cobalamin supply

Date

1984

Authors

Scott, J.S.D.
Treston, A.M.
Bowman, E.P.W.
Owens, J.A.
Cooksley, W.G.E.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Clinical Science, 1984; 67(3):299-306

Statement of Responsibility

J. S. D. Scott, A. M. Treston, E. P. W. Bowman, J. A. Owens and W. G. E. Cooksley

Conference Name

Abstract

To examine possible regulatory roles of liver and kidney in cobalamin metabolism, specific activities of the two cobalamin-dependent enzymes, uptake in vivo of cyano [57Co]cobalamin [( 57Co]CNCbl) and the binding of [57Co]Cbl to intracellular proteins were measured in normal, cobalamin-loaded and cobalamin-deficient rats. Cobalamin deficiency and cobalamin loading produced greater changes in cobalamin concentration in the kidney than in the liver. Although cobalamin deficiency resulted in a decrease in total methylmalonyl-coenzyme A mutase (methylmalonyl-CoA mutase) in both organs, cobalamin loading had no effect. Neither deficiency nor loading altered total methyltransferase activity. The holoenzyme activities of both enzymes correlated with changes in tissue cobalamin levels. Uptake of [57Co]Cbl indicated that the kidney, in contrast to the liver, increased its uptake during loading and reduced it during deficiency, suggesting a possible regulatory role for this organ. In the normal rat, 24 h after injection of [57Co]CNCbl, 0.3% of the administered [57Co]Cbl was present in the liver as free cobalamin. By contrast, in the kidney, over 13% of the [57Co]Cbl was present in the free form. During deficiency free renal [57Co]Cbl was reduced to 0.6% of the administered [57Co]Cbl whereas in cobalamin-loaded rats it was increased to more than 27%. It is concluded that alterations in tissue cobalamin levels resulting from differences in cobalamin supply are due to changes in the large pool of free cobalamin present in the kidney and not to changes in the intracellular binding.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 1984 The Biochemical Society and the Medical Research Society

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record