Abstract

1. High concentrations of copper were demonstrated histochemically in the enterocytes lining the ileum and distal jejunum of suckling rats. 2. Copper was not detected in cells from the duodenum or proximal jejunum of these rats or from any region of the small intestine of rats in which “closure” had taken place. 3. X-Ray microanalysis demonstrated copper, in equi-atomic association with sulphur, within discrete vesicles in the supranuclear cytoplasm of the enterocytes. 4. Despite the high concentrations of these two elements no biochemical evidence was found for the presence of significant amounts of copper-binding metallothionein. 5. The highest concentrations of copper (226 ± 48 mg atoms/kg dry wt: ±SD) were found in vesicles adjacent to the nucleus, which did not accumulate particulate tracers, or calcium from the lumen of the intestine. 6. These vesicles probably result from the coalescence of Golgi-derived primary lysosomcs followed by fusion with endocytic vacuoles. 7. They may provide a mechanism of copper excretion from the neonatal rat.

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