Abstract

The route of Cd uptake influences the distribution of Cd, other metals, and metallothionein (MT). Although intestinal MT levels related to the tissue mass did not show proximodistal gradients after sc administration of CdCl2, orally administered high doses of CdCl2 increased mucosal MT levels longitudinally from the duodenum to the ileum. The gradient abolished when the mucosal MT level was related to the intestinal length. To further elucidate this finding, three groups of rats were studied: a control group, a group receiving dietary CdCl2, and a group receiving sc injections of CdCl2. The small intestine was removed after a 14-d treatment. Midjejunal segments were mounted in a cryomicrotome and cut transversally into five layers along the villus-crypt axis. Mucosal enzymes were measured to control these sections. Cd was measured by AAS and MT by RIA. Alkaline phosphatase and lactase activities exhibited the typical villus-crypt gradient. Mucosal MT levels paralleled those of Cd. Although Cd and MT concentrations were high at the tip of the villi and low in the crypts after oral administration, sc treatment reversed that profile. A molar Cd-MT ratio of approx 10 or 1 was reached after po or sc treatment, respectively. This demonstrates that only oral Cd may lead to an accumulation of Cd in the mucosal tissue fairly exceeding the binding capacity of small intestinal MT. The results show that different routes of Cd intake lead to a different MT-induction pattern in the intestinal wall and that longitudinal Cd and MT concentration gradients in the small intestine observed after high oral doses are a result of their high levels at the villus tips.

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