Abstract
Abstract
The status of zinc in a mutant rat strain with heritable maldescended testes was examined. In rats with unilateral maldescended testis, the ectopic testis consistently had decreased zinc content (121.0 ± 23.0 μg zinc/g dry wt), while the eutopic testis had zinc content similar to that of normal rats (182.0 ± 5.0 μg zinc/g dry wt). Uptake of zinc by the ectopic testis was comparable to normal. Sephadex gel chromatography showed greatly reduced zinc content of one of the endogenous zinc binding fractions with a mol wt of 30,000 of cytosol of the ectopic testis in spite of a near normal protein content. Incorporation of zinc-65 into this fraction was also shown to be greatly reduced in ectopic testis. Sodium dodecylsulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that a protein of 23,000 Da was greatly reduced in quantity. This 23-kDa protein in ectopic testis may play a role in reduced testicular function of the ectopic testis.
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