Copper (Cu) accumulating in a form bound to metallothionein (MT) in the liver of Long-Evans rats with a cinnamon-like coat color (LEC rats), an animal model of Wilson disease, can be removed from the MT with tetrathiomolybdate (TTM). However, the insoluble Cu/TTM complex formed with excess TTM is known to be deposited in the liver. The metabolic fate of the insoluble Cu /TTM complex was investigated in the present study. LEC rats were injected with TTM at the dose of 10 mg/kg body weight for 8 consecutive days and were fed with a standard or low Cu diet for 14 days after the last injection. About 95% of the Cu in the liver became insoluble together with Mo. The concentration of Cu in the liver supernatants of rats fed with the standard diet increased significantly compared with that in rats dissected 24 h after the last injection (control rats), while the concentration in rats fed with the low Cu diet remained at a comparable level to that in the controls. The rate of Cu accumulation in the livers of rats fed with the standard diet did not differ before and after the treatment, suggesting that there was no rebound effect by treatment with TTM. These results suggest that the insoluble Cu/TTM complex is resolubilized in the liver, and that the solubilized complex is excreted into the bile and blood, i.e., the insoluble Cu/TTM complex is not the source of Ca reaccumulation in the form bound to MT in the liver after TTM treatment. It was concluded that, once Cu is complexed with TTM, the metal is excreted either immediately in the soluble form or slowly in the insoluble form into the bile and blood. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.