Zinc and alkaline phosphatase in developing rat oral mucosa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/00016358609026571Keywords:
Autoradiography, enzyme histochemistry, epithelium, zinc-65Abstract
Alkaline phosphatases (AlkPase) of many different tissues and species have been shown to be zinc metalloenzymes. Specific regions of rat oral mucosa have a high activity of AlkPase. Combined autoradiography and enzyme histochemistry showed that they also retained injected radioactive zinc (65Zn). The AlkPase activity was inactivated by EDTA and reactivated with zinc. However, it could not be verified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis combined with radioactivity measurements and enzyme analysis that the 65Zn uptake of oral mucosa was incorporated in the AlkPase molecule.
Acta Odontologica Scandinavica publishes original research papers as well as critical reviews relevant to the diagnosis, epidemiology, health service, prevention, aetiology, pathogenesis, pathology, physiology, microbiology, development and treatment of diseases affecting tissues of the oral cavity and associated structures including papers on cause and effect or explanatory/associative relationships for experimental or observational studies.