Abstract

Ferritin, the iron storage protein, is at least 10 times as abundant in the circulating primitive red cells of the chick embryo as in the circulating definitive red cells of adult roosters. The decline in the ferritin content of the circulating red cells in the embryo corresponded to the replacement of primitive red cells by definitive red cells, monitored by the disappearance of primitive and embryonic hemoglobins. Iron concentrations in the yolk, the major nutrient storage site, changed little during the period when ferritin was lost from the circulating red cells. The storage of iron in the ferritin of the primitive red cells and the preferential loss of the stored red cell iron that was observed in chickens also occur in mice and bullfrogs, which suggests a special role for red cell ferritin in developing animals.

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