Article

Binding of lithium and boron to human plasma proteins II: results for a bipolar patient not on lithium therapy.

Department of Physics and Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4K1, Canada.
Biological Trace Element Research (impact factor: 1.92). 03/2004; 97(2):117-24. DOI:10.1385/BTER:97:2:117 pp.117-24
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT We report further measurements of lithium and boron bound to human plasma proteins using the techniques of gel chromatography, thermal-neutron activation, and high-sensitivity helium isotope mass spectrometry. The plasma sample was donated by a bipolar patient who had never been on lithium therapy. The plasma lithium-binding pattern for the bipolar patient is distinctly different from that previously observed in this laboratory for plasma donated by a normal individual. In the bipolar case, virtually all of the lithium is bound to low-molecular-weight proteins (approx 1000 amu), whereas in the normal case, most of the lithium eluted from the gel column was bound to five high-molecular-weight proteins (approx 50,000 amu to approx 1,000,000 amu). The gel elution profiles for boron were roughly similar for the normal and bipolar cases. The lithium results are in agreement with our previous speculation that lithium-binding plasma proteins are missing or exist in very low concentrations in some individuals suffering from affective disorders.

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Keywords

affective disorders
 
bipolar case
 
bipolar cases
 
bipolar patient
 
gel elution profiles
 
high-molecular-weight proteins
 
high-sensitivity helium isotope mass spectrometry
 
human plasma proteins
 
lithium eluted
 
lithium therapy
 
lithium-binding plasma proteins
 
low concentrations
 
low-molecular-weight proteins
 
normal
 
normal case
 
normal individual
 
plasma sample
 
techniques
 
thermal-neutron activation
 

W Brian Clarke