pubmed-article:879984 | pubmed:abstractText | It is well known that thiamine is highly soluble in water. However, if chloroplatinic acid (H2PtCl6) is used during fixation, an insoluble, electron-dense thiamine-PtCl6 precipitate is formed. Using this method we performed electron microscope autoradiography of the placental labyrinth of rats in their 15th day of pregnancy after injection into the maternal bloodstream of 3H-thiamine, and we also measured the radioactivity of the tissues, in order to study the transport of the thiamine across the placenta. Both developed silver grains and radioactivity were found in the largest amounts 30 min after injection; the amounts of both declined after 2 hrs and declined further after 5 hrs. The majority of the developed silver grains were localized in the smooth-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum, which is generally thought to be the vehicle for the transport of materials in the cell, while in the mitochondria, Golgi apparatus, etc. the grains were few. Considering the substantial depletion of the amounts of both sivler grains and radioactivity after the relatively short time of 5 hrs, we conclude that the greater portion of the thiamine passes quickly across the placenta to the fetus, where it is used in the metabolism of the fetal organs, and that only a small part of the thiamine is retained in the placenta for its own metabolism. | lld:pubmed |