Linnell J C, Wilson J, Crampton R F, Smith W T, Knowles J F, Gaunt I F, Wise I J, Matthews D M
Toxicology. 1979 Sep;14(1):81-90. doi: 10.1016/0300-483x(79)90093-3.
This paper reports the bodily distribution of total cobalamin and individual cobalamins at the termination of an experiment on the effects of a low cobalamin diet and chronic cyanide or thiocyanate administration in baboons. The results show that the distribution of cobalamins in the tissues of the baboon can be altered by a low cobalamin diet and also by chronic intoxication with cyanide, whether or not the animals are on a low cobalamin diet. All animals on the low cobalamin diet showed a reduction in total and individual cobalamins. In blood plasma and erythrocytes, kidney, spleen, testis and brain, the proportion of methylcobalamin tended to be disproportionately reduced in cobalamin-depleted animals. This reduction was lessened or prevented by the administration of cyanide. Neither cyanide not thiocyanate produced a significant increase in the proportion of cyanocobalamin in plasma, though thiocyanate produced a large increase in cyanocobalamin in erythrocytes. In liver, cyanocobalamin was more than doubled by the administration of cyanide to cobalamin-depleted animals.