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Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (
ceruloplasmin
)
5,074
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Copper deficiency leads to profound cardiac hypertrophy and failure. Myocytes were isolated from hearts of copper-deficient and copper-adequate male Holtzman rats to characterize size and function of the cells. Weanling rats were offered a semipurified diet low in copper in two separate experiments (Experiment 1, 0.45 mg Cu/kg and Experiment 2, 0.30 mg Cu/kg). Control (copper-adequate) rats drank
water
supplemented with cupric sulfate (20 mg Cu/L). Compared with copper-adequate rats, copper-deficient rats had lower hematocrits, liver copper concentrations and plasma
ceruloplasmin
activities, and higher heart weights and liver iron concentrations. When myocytes were isolated in low calcium media (1 micromol/L), cell viability was not affected by diet history. However, upon restoration to more physiologic levels of calcium (1 mmol/L), cells from copper-deficient rats were less viable, exhibiting an average loss of 34 and 40% in Experiments 1 and 2, respectively, compared with a 9.5 and 13% loss of cells, respectively, from the copper-adequate rats. Addition of the calcium channel blocker, verapamil, did not block this calcium-dependent loss of viability nor did the mitochondrial calcium channel blockers, ruthenium red and cyclosporin A. For comparison with another model of cardiac hypertrophy, the calcium sensitivity of myocytes from hypertrophic hearts of Sprague-Dawley rats with aortic constrictions was found not to differ from that of sham-operated rats. Thus, cardiac hypertrophy associated with postnatal copper deficiency results in a unique increased calcium intolerance of isolated myocytes.
...
PMID:Calcium reintroduction decreases viability of cardiac myocytes from copper-deficient rats. 1049 56
The Fet3 protein (Fet3p) is a multinuclear copper oxidase essential for high-affinity iron uptake in yeast. Fet3p contains one type 1, one type 2, and a strongly antiferromagnetically coupled binuclear Cu(II)-Cu(II) type 3 copper. The type 2 and type 3 sites constitute a structurally distinct trinuclear cluster at which dioxygen is reduced to
water
. In Fet3p, as in
ceruloplasmin
, Fe(II) is oxidized to Fe(III) at the type 1 copper; this is the
ferroxidase
reaction that is fundamental to the physiologic function of these two enzymes. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have generated type 1-depleted (T1D), type 2-depleted (T2D), and T1D/T2D mutants. None were active in the essential
ferroxidase
reaction catalyzed by Fet3p. However, the spectroscopic signatures of the remaining Cu(II) sites in any one of the three mutants were indistinguishable from those exhibited by the wild type. Although the native protein and the T1D mutant were isolated in the completely oxidized Cu(II) form, the T2D and T1D/T2D mutants were found to be completely reduced. This result is consistent with the essential role of the type 2 copper in dioxygen turnover, and with the suggestions that cuprous ion is the valence state of intracellular copper. Although stable to dioxygen, the Cu(I) sites in both proteins were readily oxidized by hydrogen peroxide. The double mutant was extensively analyzed by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Edge and near-edge features clearly distinguished the oxidized from the reduced form of the binuclear cluster. EXAFS was strongly consistent with the expected coordination of each type 3 copper by three histidine imidazoles. Also, copper scattering was observed in the oxidized cluster along with scattering from a ligand corresponding to a bridging oxygen. The data derived from the reduced cluster indicated that the bridge was absent in this redox state. In the reduced form of the double mutant, an N/O ligand was apparent that was not seen in the reduced form of the T1D protein. This ligand in T1D/T2D could be either the remaining type 2 copper imidazole ligand (from His416) or a
water
molecule that could be stabilized at the type 3 cluster by H-bonding to this side chain. If present in the native protein, this H(2)O could provide acid catalysis of dioxygen reduction at the reduced trinuclear center.
...
PMID:Spectroscopic analysis of the trinuclear cluster in the Fet3 protein from yeast, a multinuclear copper oxidase. 1069 98
The ability of
ceruloplasmin
(Cp) to oxidize low-density lipoproteins (LDL) in the presence of
water
-soluble antioxidants was investigated and a reaction mechanism proposed. Ascorbate strongly enhanced LDL oxidation, but only after its rapid consumption. Dehydroascorbate enhanced Cp-mediated LDL oxidation even more strongly. Lipid-soluble antioxidants and
water
-soluble peroxides did not show noticeable activation. However, loading of LDL with lipid hydroperoxides increased the initial oxidation rate. We conclude that Cp mediates a localized redox cycle, where reduction of Cp-Cu2+ is effected by
water
-soluble reductants and reoxidation by liposoluble hydroperoxides.
...
PMID:Ceruloplasmin as low-density lipoprotein oxidase: activation by ascorbate and dehydroascorbate. 1145 53
Recombinant human ferritin loaded with iron via its own
ferroxidase
activity did not sediment through a sucrose-density gradient as a function of iron content. Analysis of the recombinant ferritin by native PAGE demonstrated an increase in altered migration pattern of the ferritins with increasing sedimentation, indicating an alteration of the overall charge of ferritin. Additionally, analysis of the ferritin by SDS-PAGE under nonreducing conditions demonstrated that the ferritin had formed large aggregates, which suggests disulfide bonds are involved in the aggregation. The hydroxyl radical was detected by electron spin resonance spectroscopy during iron loading into recombinant ferritin by its own
ferroxidase
activity. However, recombinant human ferritin loaded with iron in the presence of
ceruloplasmin
sedimented through a sucrose-density gradient similar to native ferritin. This ferritin was shown to sediment as a function of iron content. The addition of
ceruloplasmin
to the iron loading assay eliminated the detection of the DMPO-*OH adduct observed during loading using the
ferroxidase
activity of ferritin. The elimination of the DMPO-*OH adduct was determined to be due to the ability of
ceruloplasmin
to completely reduce oxygen to
water
during the oxidation of the ferrous iron. The implications of these data for the present models for iron uptake into ferritin are discussed.
...
PMID:Modification of ferritin during iron loading. 1159 84
The aim of this study was to determine whether total copper or soluble copper concentration is associated with gastrointestinal signs and symptoms. Forty-five healthy adult women (18-55 years of age), living in Santiago, Chile, ingested tap
water
with 5 mg/L of copper containing different ratios of soluble copper (copper sulfate) and insoluble copper (copper oxide) over a 9-week period. Three randomized sequences of the different copper ratios (0:5, 1:4, 2:3, 3:2, and 5:0 mg/L) were followed. Subjects recorded their
water
consumption and gastrointestinal symptoms daily on a special form. Mean
water
consumption was similar among groups. Serum copper levels,
ceruloplasmin
, and activities of liver enzymes were within normal limits. No differences were detected between the means of biochemical parameters at the beginning and at the end of the study. Twenty subjects presented gastrointestinal disturbances at least once during the study, 9 suffered diarrhea (with or without abdominal pain and vomiting), and the other 11 subjects reported abdominal pain, nausea, or vomiting. No differences were found in incidence of abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea regardless of the ratio of copper sulfate to copper oxide. In conclusion, both copper sulfate (a soluble compound) and copper oxide (an insoluble compound) have comparable effects on the induction of gastrointestinal manifestations, implying that similar levels of ionic copper were present in the stomach.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal effects associated with soluble and insoluble copper in drinking water. 1167 25
Bacterioferritin from Rhodobacter capsulatus was crystallized and its structure was solved at 2.6 A resolution. This first structure of a bacterioferritin from a photosynthetic organism is a spherical particle of 24 subunits displaying 432 point-group symmetry like ferritin and bacterioferritin from Escherichia coli. Crystallized in the I422 space group, its structural analysis reveals for the first time the non-symmetric heme molecule located on a twofold crystallographic symmetry axis. Other hemes of the protomer are situated on twofold noncrystallographic axes. Apparently, both types of sites bind heme in two orientations, leading to an average structure consisting of a symmetric 50:50 mixture, thus satisfying the crystallographic and noncrystallographic symmetry of the crystal. Five
water
molecules are situated close to the heme, which is bound in a hydrophobic pocket and axially coordinated by two crystallographic or noncrystallographically related methionine residues. Its
ferroxidase
center, in which Fe(II) is oxidized to Fe(III), is empty or fractionally occupied by a metal ion. Two positions are observed for the coordinating Glu18 side chain instead of one in the E. coli enzyme in which the site is occupied. This result suggests that the orientation of the Glu18 side chain could be constrained by this interaction.
...
PMID:The 2.6 A resolution structure of Rhodobacter capsulatus bacterioferritin with metal-free dinuclear site and heme iron in a crystallographic 'special position'. 1175 77
Metallothionein (MT) protects the body from both harmful non-essential and excessive essential metals. Copper (Cu) is an essential metal, and its concentration in the body is regulated at a constant level between excess and deficient ones. Cu accumulating in the livers of Wilson disease patients and its animal model, Long-Evans rats with a cinnamon-like coat color (LEC) rats, is in the form of Cu,Zn-MT, MT being an antioxidant. Contrary to the efficient production of MT in response to excessive accumulation of Cu in LEC rats, Cu-binding to MT only occurs marginally under normal conditions. However, the present study revealed that Cu binds to MT more with a severe Cu-deficiency. Namely, male C57BL/6J mice were fed a Cu-deficient diet (0.037 mg Cu/g) and deionized
water
containing trientine, and then the concentration and distribution of Cu were determined. It was suggested that the cessation of biliary excretion and limitation of the Cu supply to
ceruloplasmin
are the first responses on feeding of a Cu-deficient diet, followed by an increase in Cu-MT with maintenance of the Cu concentration in the liver. These results suggest that MT causes the recruitment of Cu in a Cu-deficient environment by sequestering Cu from degraded Cu-enzymes and delivering it to Cu chaperones.
...
PMID:Roles of metallothionein in copper homeostasis: responses to Cu-deficient diets in mice. 1180 37
Ceruloplasmin is a serum
ferroxidase
that contains greater than 95% of the copper found in plasma. This protein is a member of the multicopper oxidase family, an evolutionarily conserved group of proteins that utilize copper to couple substrate oxidation with the four-electron reduction of oxygen to
water
. Despite the need for copper in
ceruloplasmin
function, this protein plays no essential role in the transport or metabolism of this metal. Aceruloplasminemia is a neurodegenerative disease resulting from inherited loss-of-function mutations in the
ceruloplasmin
gene. Characterization of this disorder revealed a critical physiological role for
ceruloplasmin
in determining the rate of iron efflux from cells with mobilizable iron stores and has provided new insights into human iron metabolism and nutrition.
...
PMID:Ceruloplasmin metabolism and function. 1205 53
Frataxin is required for maintenance of normal mitochondrial iron levels and respiration. The mature form of yeast frataxin (mYfh1p) assembles stepwise into a multimer of 840 kDa (alpha(48)) that accumulates iron in a
water
-soluble form. Here, two distinct iron oxidation reactions are shown to take place during the initial assembly step (alpha --> alpha(3)). A
ferroxidase
reaction with a stoichiometry of 2 Fe(II)/O(2) is detected at Fe(II)/mYfh1p ratios of < or = 0.5. Ferroxidation is progressively overcome by autoxidation at Fe(II)/mYfh1p ratios of >0.5. Gel filtration analysis indicates that an oligomer of mYfh1p, alpha(3), is responsible for both reactions. The observed 2 Fe(II)/O(2) stoichiometry implies production of H(2)O(2) during the
ferroxidase
reaction. However, only a fraction of the expected total H(2)O(2) is detected in solution. Oxidative degradation of mYfh1p during the
ferroxidase
reaction suggests that most H(2)O(2) reacts with the protein. Accordingly, the addition of mYfh1p to a mixture of Fe(II) and H(2)O(2) results in significant attenuation of Fenton chemistry. Multimer assembly is fully inhibited under anaerobic conditions, indicating that mYfh1p is activated by Fe(II) in the presence of O(2). This combination induces oligomerization and mYfh1p-catalyzed Fe(II) oxidation, starting a process that ultimately leads to the sequestration of as many as 50 Fe(II)/subunit inside the multimer.
...
PMID:The ferroxidase activity of yeast frataxin. 1214 69
Laccase is a polyphenol oxidase, which belongs to the family of blue multicopper oxidases. These enzymes catalyze the one-electron oxidation of four reducing-substrate molecules concomitant with the four-electron reduction of molecular oxygen to
water
. Laccases oxidize a broad range of substrates, preferably phenolic compounds. In the presence of mediators, fungal laccases exhibit an enlarged substrate range and are then able to oxidize compounds with a redox potential exceeding their own. Until now, only one crystal structure of a laccase in an inactive, type-2 copper-depleted form has been reported. We present here the first crystal structure of an active laccase containing a full complement of coppers, the complete polypeptide chain together with seven carbohydrate moieties. Despite the presence of all coppers in the new structure, the folds of the two laccases are quite similar. The coordination of the type-3 coppers, however, is distinctly different. The geometry of the trinuclear copper cluster in the Trametes versicolor laccase is similar to that found in the ascorbate oxidase and that of mammalian
ceruloplasmin
structures, suggesting a common reaction mechanism for the copper oxidation and the O(2) reduction. In contrast to most blue copper proteins, the type-1 copper in the T. versicolor laccase has no axial ligand and is only 3-fold coordinated. Previously, a modest elevation of the redox potential was attributed to the lack of an axial ligand. Based on the present structural data and sequence comparisons, a mechanism is presented to explain how laccases could tune their redox potential by as much as 200 mV.
...
PMID:Crystal structure of a laccase from the fungus Trametes versicolor at 1.90-A resolution containing a full complement of coppers. 1216 89
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