Relationship between rabbit transferrin electrophoretic patterns and plasma iron concentrations

Abstract
Rabbit transferrin (Tf) was studied electrophoretically using 1141 blood samples from individuals belonging to seven populations (Spanish Common, Spanish Giant, Butterfly, Lyone de Bourgogne, New Zealand White, Californian and New Zealand White .times. Californian hybrids). No Tf polymorphism was found by starch gel electrophoresis, but six patterns, differing in the presence and/or intensity of three bands (''a'', anodic; ''b'', intermediate; and ''c'', cathodic) were observed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. No genetic model could explain these patterns, since they reflect differences in plasma Tf iron content. The electrophoretic test allowed a direct observation of the relative in vivo levels of the different Tf molecular species; saturated (band ''a'', Fe2Tf); semi-saturated (band ''b'', Fe1Tf); and without iron (band ''e'' Fe0Tf, apotransferrin). The degree of iron saturation of Tf varied among individuals and throughout the individual''s life. Specifically, in pregnany females, Fe2Tf and Fe1Tf are generally observed, except in late pregnancy (from day 25 to parturition), when mainly apotransferrin is observed. Significantly, within 24 h post-partum, high levels of Fe2Tf are reached in the female''s serum.