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1 McMaster University, Department of Biology, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4K1; and 2 Environmental Laboratories, Mining and Mineral Sciences Laboratories, Canada Center for Mineral and Energy Technology, Natural Resources Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0G1
Nonacclimated and Cu-acclimated rainbow
trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) exhibited equally rapid
clearance of a single bolus of injected 64Cu (3,780 nmol/kg) from the plasma (32-40 min to half-
concentration). Eight hours after Cu injection, ~80% of the
injected Cu was found in the liver. However, when Cu labeled with
64Cu was presented intravascularly via continuous infusion
at a rate of 158 nmol · kg
1 · h
1 for 72 h, Cu-acclimated fish cleared plasma Cu more effectively than
nonacclimated fish. The use of chronically implanted cystic bile duct
cannulas revealed a fourfold increase in hepatobiliary Cu excretion in
Cu-acclimated fish during infusion, demonstrating the important
homeostatic role of the liver in Cu metabolism. Extrahepatobiliary Cu
excretion, likely through the gills and apparently exceeding biliary Cu
excretion, was evident from appearance of 64Cu in the
ambient water but was not altered by Cu acclimation. Cu accumulation in
white muscle also played an important a role in copper homeostasis.
64Cu; copper acclimation; hepatobiliary copper excretion; plasma copper
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