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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A comparison of the distribution of Se75 in proteins of blood,liver,and kidney from rats differing in Selenium status

K. R. Millar, +2 more
- 01 Nov 1972 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 4, pp 756-777
TLDR
Rats maintained on a diet deficient in a-tocopherol and selenium began dying after 3 weeks and the livers exhibited classical dietary necrotic degeneration, but little difference was noted in the proteins of the kidney.
Abstract
Rats maintained on a diet deficient in a-tocopherol and selenium began dying after 3 weeks. The livers exhibited classical dietary necrotic degeneration. The distribution of Se75 in proteins of blood, liver, and kidney separated by gel-filtration was compared 3 days after injecting Se75labelled sodium selenite into rats differing in selenium and vitamin E status. No differences were found between the distribution patterns of Se75 in proteins from animals deficient in vitamin E and in those from animals fed a vitamin E-supplemented diet. For animals fed seleniumdeficient or selenium-supplemented diets the patterns of Se75 distribution in liver and plasma proteins differed markedly, but little difference was noted in the proteins of the kidney. After 11 weeks on the selenium-deficient diets, by which time the liver selenium concentration had fallen to 0.013 μp,g!g (wet weight), no difference was found between the in vitro uptake of Se75 into the red cells of the blood of the deficient animals and t...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Selenium and immune responses.

TL;DR: Selenium (Se) affects all components of the immune system, i.e., the development and expression of nonspecific, humoral, and cell-mediated responses, while supplementation with low doses of Se appears to result in augmentation and/or restoration of immunologic functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A selenocysteine-containing selenium-transport protein in rat plasma.

TL;DR: The results indicate that selenoprotein P is synthesized in rat liver and that it transfers selenium from the liver to extrahepatic tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selenoprotein P: properties, functions, and regulation.

TL;DR: Analysis of the human SeP promoter indicates a transcriptional regulation of SeP by inflammatory mediators and a function as an extracellular antioxidant seems most probable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selenocysteine-containing proteins from rat and monkey plasma

TL;DR: Findings are consistent with a selenium-transport function for this protein, which was attached to both the rat and monkey plasma protein in the form of the amino acid selenocysteine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selenoprotein P receptor from rat

TL;DR: The study indicated that selenoprotein P has a receptor and is involved in selenium transport and the binding was specific in that increasing amounts of partially-fractionated rat plasma specifically displaced the binding of 75Se-labeled selenobrotein P to testis membrane in a competitive manner.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of sulfhydryl groups with 2,2′- or 4,4′-dithiodipyridine☆

TL;DR: The proposed method is compared with known methods for the determination of sulfhydryl groups and permits determination of SH groups in simple compounds and in biological materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of C14-labeled proteins by disc electrophoresis

TL;DR: This report presents an alternative procedure involving autoradiography of dried longitudinal gel slices that is relatively uncomplicated and can be used to develop the entire pattern of radioactivity in a gel without significant sacrifice of resolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrophotometric determination of microgram quantities of protein without nucleic acid interference

TL;DR: A spectrophotometric method which eliminates interference due to nucleic acid absorbance has been developed for determining protein concentration over the range of 5 to 180 μg/ml and the results obtained have been compared to those obtained with the Folin-Lowry and microbiuret methods.
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