The Reaction of PuIV with the Iron Transport System in Human Blood Serum
- 1 February 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Radiation Research
- Vol. 33 (2) , 381-+
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3572489
Abstract
When human blood serum that had been tagged in vitro with monomeric PuIV was subjected to gel filtration, most of the PuIV was found in 2 molecular-weight ranges, that of the low-molecular-weight serum proteins and that of small molecules and ions. The distribution of PuIV between the 2 peaks was variable. In addition, a small amount was eluted in the highest-molecular-weight fraction. By a combination of gel filtration, ion exchange, and electrophoresis the PuIV protein complex was isolated, and the protein was identified as transferrin, the protein that transports Fe. PuIV appeared to be found at the Fe-binding sites, and the reaction between PuIV and transferrin was shown to be reversible. The stability constant of the complex is high but less than that of the very stable Fein transferrin complex. The variation in distribution of PuIV between transferrin and the low-molecular-weight region thus is related to the variation in the amount of Fe bound by the transferrin.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- HUMAN TRANSFERRIN - MOLECULAR WEIGHT AND SEDIMENTATION PROPERTIES1966
- In Vitro Studies of the Interactions of PuIV with Blood ProteinsRadiation Research, 1965
- IRON ABSORPTION. MEASUREMENT OF INGESTED IRON59 BY A HUMAN WHOLE-BODY LIQUID SCINTILLATION COUNTERJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1961
- STUDIES ON FREE ERYTHROCYTE PROTOPORPHYRIN, PLASMA IRON AND PLASMA COPPER IN NORMAL AND ANEMIC SUBJECTSBlood, 1948