Abstract

A cadmium-binding protein from monkey brain has been isolated, purified and characterized. The absorption spectrum of this protein indicates the presence of Cu-Zn thionein in the normal monkey brain which has a strong affinity to bind cadmium. On cadmium exposure the protein sequestered most of the cadmium which entered the brain. The apparent molecular weight of this protein as determined on a gel filtration column calibrated with marker proteins has been found to be in the range of 11 500–12 000 Da. The ration of absorbance at 254 nm/280 nm is more than 1 indicating the presence of cadmium-mercaptide bonds, which was further confirmed by the presence of 15 cysteine residues. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the protein shows 3 bands indicating the presence of 3 isometallothionein forms. Unlike hepatic or renal thioneins, the cadmium-binding protein in brain is not inducible following administration of cadmium. However, when antibodies raised against hepatic metallothionein were cross-reacted with brain Cd-binding protein, a line of identity was observed, indicating the 2 proteins are immunologically identical and share a high degree of structural similarity.

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