Abstract

Rats were given intravenous injections of 125I-labelled human α 2-macroglobulin·trypsin. The half-time of disappearance of radioactivity from arterial blood was 2 min. External counting showed that radioactivity in the liver was maximal by 10 min and then decreased slowly. 87% of the injected dose was recovered in the liver by 10 min. Light- and electron microscopic autoradiography carried out on samples of liver fixed with glutaraldehyde 3 min or 30 min after the injection showed that 85–90% of the grains were over the hepatocytes and 4–9% were over the Kupffer cells. Thus, uptake into hepatocytes, and not into Kupffer cells as believed previously, appears to account for the major part of the uptake of α 2-macroglobulin·trypsin by the liver and thereby for its rapid removal from the blood.

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