The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-3329
Print ISSN : 0040-8727
ISSN-L : 0040-8727
Tissue Distribution of Unentrapped or Liposome-Entrapped 131I-Labeled β-Galactosidase Injected into Rats
GORO TAKADAHITOSHI ONODERAKEIYA TADA
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1981 Volume 134 Issue 2 Pages 103-114

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Abstract
TAKADA, G., ONODERA, H. and TADA, K. Tissue Distribution of Unentrapped or Liposome-Entrapped 131I-Labeled β-Galactosidase Injected into Rats. Tohoku J. exp. Med., 1981, 134 (2), 103-114-Either unentrapped (free) or liposome-entrapped 131I-labeled β-galactosidase was injected into rats from tail veins. Tissue distribution and intracellular localization of the radioactivity of both sources were compared. The half-life of liposome-entrapped enzyme in the circulation was much longer than that of the free enzyme. The radioactivity removed from the circulation was recovered primarily in the liver, and to a lesser extent in almost all tissues studied. A small but significant uptake of liposome-entrapped enzyme by the brain was also observed. Uptake of liposome-entrapped enzyme was greater than that of free enzyme in the spleen, heart, lungs and brain, excepting the liver and kidneys. Subcellular fractionation showed distribution of the radioactivity of liposome-entrapped enzyme favoring the mitochondrial-lysosomal fraction from these tissues except the heart. There was a difference in the pattern of intracellular distribution of the radioactivity in the brain of rats between the administration of free enzyme and that of liposome-entrapped enzyme. These findings suggest that when liposomes containing β-galactosidase were injected into rats from the tail veins, they would penetrate the blood-brain barrier and would reach the lysosomes in the central nervous system tissue more effectively than the free enzyme itself.
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