Minerals and Trace Elements 233
Table 9.21
Absorption, transport and storage characteristics of the ultratrace elements
Element
Major mechanism(s) for homeostasis
Means of absorption
Percentage of ingested absorbed
Transport and storage vehicles
Aluminum
Absorption
Uncertain; some evidence for passive diffusion through
the paracellular pathway; also, evidence for active absorption through processes shared with active processes of calcium; probably occurs in proximal duodenum; citrate combined with aluminum enhances absorption
<1%
Transferrin carries aluminum in plasma; bone
a possible storage site
Arsenic
Urinary excretion; inorganic
arsenic as mostly dimethylarsinic acid and organic arsenic as mostly arsenobetaine
Inorganic arsenate becomes sequestered in or on
mucosal tissue, then absorption involves a simple movement down a concentration gradient; organic arsenic absorbed mainly by simple diffusion through lipid regions of the intestinal boundary
Soluble inorganic forms,
>90%;
slightly soluble inorganic forms, 20–30%; inorganic forms with foods, 60–75%; methylated forms, 45–90%
Before excretion inorganic arsenic is
converted into monomethylarsonic acid and dimethylarsinic acid; arsenobetaine not biotransformed; arsenocholine transformed to arsenobetaine
Boron
Urinary excretion
Ingested boron is converted into B(OH)
and absorbed in 3
this form, probably by passive diffusion
>90%
Boron transported through the body as
undissociated B(OH)
; bone a possible 3
storage site
Cadmium
Absorption
May share a common absorption mechanism with other
metals (e.g. zinc) but mechanism is less effi cient for cadmium
5%
Incorporated into metallothionein which
probably is both a storage and transport vehicle
Germanium
Urinary excretion
Has not been conclusively determined but probably is by
passive diffusion
>90%
None identifi ed
Lead
Absorption
Uncertain; thought to be by passive diffusion in small
intestine but evidence has been presented for an active transport perhaps involving the system for calcium
Adults 5–15%, children 40–50%
Bone is a repository for lead
Lithium
Urinary excretion
Passive diffusion by paracellular transport via the tight
junctions and pericellular spaces
Lithium chloride highly absorbed:
>90%
Bone can serve as a store for lithium
Nickel
Both absorption and urinary
excretion
Uncertain, evidence for both passive diffusion (perhaps
as an amino acid or other low molecular weight complex) and energy-driven transport; occurs in the small intestine
<10% with food
Transported in blood principally bound to
serum albumin with small amounts bound to
L-histidine and
α^2
-macroglobulin; no
organ accumulates physiological amounts of nickel
Rubidium
Excretion through kidney
and intestine
Resembles potassium in its pattern of absorption;
rubidium and potassium thought to share a transport system
Highly absorbed
None identifi ed
Silicon
Both absorption and urinary
excretion
Mechanisms involved in intestinal absorption have not
been described
Food silicon near 50%; insoluble
or poorly soluble silicates ~1%
Silicon in plasma believed to exist as
undisassociated monomeric silicic acid
Tin
Absorption
Mechanisms involved in intestinal absorption have not
been described
~3%; percentage increases when
very low amounts are ingested
None identifi ed; bone might be a repository
Vanadium
Absorption
Vanadate has been suggested to be absorbed through
phosphate or other anion transport systems; vanadyl has been suggested to use iron transport systems; absorption occurs in the duodenum
<10%
Converted into vanadyltransferrin and
vanadyl-ferritin; whether transferrin is the transport vehicle and ferritin is the storage vehicle for vanadium remains to be determined; bone is a repository for excess vanadium
Reproduced from Nielsen (1999) in Sadler
et al. Encyclopaedia of Human Nutrition
, copyright 1999 with permission of Elsevier.