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Title: Mechanism of nephrotoxicity induced by repeated administration of cadmium chloride in rats. Author: Sudo J, Hayashi T, Kimura S, Kakuno K, Terui J, Takashima K, Soyama M. Journal: J Toxicol Environ Health; 1996 Jul; 48(4):333-48. PubMed ID: 8691505. Abstract: To explore the mechanism of Cd nephrotoxicity, CdCl2 was subcutaneously injected to rats, at 3 mg Cd/kg body weight once a day, for 8 d. In the liver, Cd bound to metallothioneins (MTs-Cd) rose from d 1 after the initiation of CdCl2 administration, and reached a plateau after the administration ceased. In the plasma, MTs-Cd rose from d 4, peaked on d 8, and gradually fell thereafter. In the kidneys, leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) and N-acetyl beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) fell during d 6-20, and Cd bound to cellular membranes (Mem-Cd) rose from d 1 and reached a plateau during d 6-20. The Mem-Cd levels were significantly correlated with the reduction in the LAP and NAG activity; the values of MTs-Cd plus Mem-Cd were almost equivalent to those of total Cd. These findings showed that the hepatic synthesis of MTs-Cd occurred followed by its release into plasma; the extent of renal injury was aggravated as the plasma level of MTs-Cd rose; and a greater part of the renal Cd distributed intracellularly as the MTs-binding form, while the residual Cd distributed as the cellular membrane-binding form. Also, it was suggested that Cd that occurred as the cellular membrane- binding form in the kidneys was involved in manifestation of renal injury.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]