Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (Menkes)
1,057 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of this article is to emphasize the important role that copper plays in the function of nerve cells. We are reporting preliminary data which suggest that the swelling of axons which we produce in rats by iminodipropionitrile, IDPN, is due to its chelating action on copper, and how conversely supplementation with copper abolishes both symptoms and lesions. The copper values we obtained by atomic absorption spectrophotometry of the spinal cord and brain from the animals fully support this contention. In comparing these results with the diseases that are known to be due to copper deficiency, namely Menkes disease in man, swayback in lambs and several neurological mutant mice, we find not only similar axonal swellings, but also amelioration of symptoms and lesions by early administration of copper. Considering the main forms in which copper is present, we discuss the cuproproteins, i.e. ceruloplasmin and metallothionein, and their role in transport and delivery of copper to various organs. Further, the many cuproenzymes i.e. superoxide dismutase, tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase, lysine oxidase, cytochrome oxidase, monoamine oxidases, tyrosinase, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and d-amino levulinate dehydratase are noted for their roles in the nervous system. Finally, we suggest that neuronal copper deficiency should be more fully investigated as a possible etiological factor in the more common neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ALS.
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PMID:Deficiency of copper can cause neuronal degeneration. 161 61

The brindled mottled mutant mouse, a model of Menkes' disease, has alterations in copper homeostasis which cause, among other sequelae, neuronal degeneration in selected areas of brain. This work examined the neurochemical changes at postnatal days (PND) 15, 30 and 60 in females heterozygous for the sex-linked brindled mutation. These data were compared to behavioral alterations and to fur coat color at these same time points. The brindled heterozygotic females had lower concentrations of norepinephrine (NE) in the cingulate cortex, and higher levels of dopamine or dopamine metabolites in the cingulate cortex, thalamus and hypothalamus across all ages, although the difference was greatest at PND 15. The brindled females were much less active than their normal littermates at PND 15, but the differences were no longer evident at PND 30 and 60. Mottling of the fur is believed to result from low tyrosinase activity caused by abnormalities in copper metabolism. The fur pattern and behavior of the brindled mice were highly correlated with NE levels in the cingulate cortex and thalamus. These data show that female brindled mice have neurochemical abnormalities similar to (if less severe than) the male hemizygotes, that these abnormalities are regionally specific, are most apparent prior to 30 days of age, and are linked to behavioral deficits. These data also show that the extent of such deficits can be predicted by a quantitative analysis of the fur pattern of these females.
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PMID:The female brindled mouse as a model of Menkes' disease: the relationship of fur pattern to behavioral and neurochemical abnormalities. 175 14

There are several known examples of mutations which influence copper homeostasis in humans and animals. Pleiotropic effects are observed when the mutant gene disturbs copper flux. In some cases, the mutation alters the level of a specific copper ligand (enzyme) and the clinical consequences are unique. The two most widely studied genetic maladies in humans are Menkes' and Wilson's diseases. Menkes' disease is an X-linked fatal disorder in which copper accumulates in some organs (intestine and kidney) and is low in others (liver and brain). Wilson's disease is an autosomal recessive disorder in which copper accumulates, if untreated, in liver and subsequently in brain and kidney. Pathophysiological consequences of copper deficiency and toxicity characterize these two disorders. Specific mutations of human cuproenzymes include overproduction of copper-zinc superoxide dismutase in Down's syndrome, absence of tyrosinase in albinism, hereditary mitochondrial myopathy due to reduction in cytochrome c oxidase, and altered lysyl oxidase in X-linked forms of cutis laxa and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Mutations altering copper metabolism are also known in animals. Several murine mutants have been studied. The most extensively investigated mutants are the mottled mice, in particular brindled mice, which have a mutation analogous to that of Menkes' disease. Another recently described murine mutation is toxic milk (tx) an autosomal recessive disorder that is characterized by copper accumulation in liver. Two other mutants, crinkled and quaking, were once thought to exhibit abnormal copper metabolism. Recent data has not confirmed this. A mutation in Bedlington terriers has been described which is very similar to Wilson's disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Genetic diseases of copper metabolism. 351 56

There has been considerable progress in chromosome mapping and gene identification in several severe hereditary skin diseases, leading to changes in genetic counseling. It is now possible to propose antenatal diagnosis to couples at risk based on an analysis of foetal DNA from trophoblast biopsies performed as early as the 9th week of gestation. Antenatal can be made by direct analysis based on identifying the mutation known in the family at risk or on indirect analysis based on the linkage disequilibrium of the allele or alleles associated with the disease in the family at risk. This method has already been shown to be effective in recessive dystrophic bullous epidermolysis, lethal Herlitz's junctional bullous epidermolysis, bullous ichthyosiform hereditary erythroderma, von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis, tyrosinase negative oculocutaneous albinism, Gorlin's syndrome, anhidrotic ectodermic dysplasia and Menkes disease. These techniques will replace microscopic examination of ultrastructure in foetal skin biopsies performed at 20 weeks gestation. They can also be applied to diseases where the antenatal diagnosis now relies on enzyme function tests or DNA distribution. Improving genetic counselling in these diseases requires the identification of the implicated genes, identification of the causal mutations in the families at risk and development of genetic markers for these diseases.
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PMID:[Prenatal diagnosis of cutaneous genetic diseases by the study of fetal DNA]. 852 12

The role of trace elements in vivo has not been completely clarified. Trace elements were studied in melanin granules in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and choroid of hereditary copper-deficient macular mice as a model of Menkes' disease. The analysis of elements in these melanin granules was done by new methods: freeze-embedding and an energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis (EDX). We used 14-day- and 1-month-old male hemizygote macular mice for the experiments and normal litter-mates as controls. Melanin granules in RPE and choroid contained sulfur, chloride, calcium, iron, copper and zinc. Calcium and copper were especially abundant in 14-day-old hemizygote macular mice, although there were few melanin granules in their RPE. The fact that copper was most abundant in the melanin granules in the RPE of 14-day-old macular mice suggests that the synthesis of melanin granules in the RPE and choroid of the hemizygote macular mice cannot be completed because of the lower activity of copper-containing enzymes such as tyrosinase and the abnormal copper distribution in various organs. Therefore, the melanin granules in the RPE and choroid of hemizygote macular mice are irregular in shape and few in number. Large amounts of copper concentrated in melanin granules in the RPE and choroid of hemizygote macular mice might induce quantitative abnormalities of trace elements.
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PMID:X-ray microanalysis of melanin granules of retinal pigment epithelium and choroid in hereditary copper deficient mice (macular mice). 998 42

Menkes disease is an X-linked recessive copper deficiency disorder caused by mutations in the ATP7A (MNK) gene. The MNK gene encodes a copper-transporting P-type ATPase, MNK, which is localized predominantly in the trans-Golgi network (TGN). The MNK protein relocates to the plasma membrane in cells exposed to elevated copper where it functions in copper efflux. A role for MNK at the TGN in mammalian cells has not been demonstrated. In this study, we investigated whether the MNK protein is required for the activity of tyrosinase, a copper-dependent enzyme involved in melanogenesis that is synthesized within the secretory pathway. We demonstrate that recombinant tyrosinase expressed in immortalized Menkes fibroblast cell lines was inactive, whereas in normal fibroblasts known to express MNK protein there was substantial tyrosinase activity. Co-expression of the Menkes protein and tyrosinase from plasmid constructs in Menkes fibroblasts led to the activation of tyrosinase and melanogenesis. This MNK-dependent activation of tyrosinase was impaired by the chelation of copper in the medium of cells and after mutation of the invariant phosphorylation site at aspartic acid residue 1044 of MNK. Collectively, these findings suggest that the MNK protein transports copper into the secretory pathway of mammalian cells to activate copper-dependent enzymes and reveal a second copper transport role for MNK in mammalian cells. These findings describe a single cell-based system that allows both the copper transport and trafficking functions of MNK to be studied. This study also contributes to our understanding of the molecular basis of pigmentation in mammalian cells.
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PMID:The Menkes copper transporter is required for the activation of tyrosinase. 1109 60

Menkes protein (ATP7A) is a P-type ATPase involved in copper uptake and homeostasis. Disturbed copper homeostasis occurs in patients with Menkes disease, an X-linked disorder characterized by mental retardation, neurodegeneration, connective tissue disorders, and early childhood death. Mutations in ATP7A result in malfunction of copper-requiring enzymes, such as tyrosinase and copper/zinc superoxide dismutase. The first step of the two-step amidation reaction carried out by peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase (PAM) also requires copper. We used tissue from wild-type rats and mice and an ATP7A-specific antibody to determine that ATP7A is expressed at high levels in tissues expressing high levels of PAM. ATP7A is largely localized to the trans Golgi network in pituitary endocrine cells. The Atp7a mouse, bearing a mutation in the Atp7a gene, is an excellent model system for examining the consequences of ATP7A malfunction. Despite normal levels of PAM protein, levels of several amidated peptides were reduced in pituitary and brain extracts of Atp7a mice, demonstrating that PAM function is compromised when ATP7A is inactive. Based on these results, we conclude that a reduction in the ability of PAM to produce bioactive end-products involved in neuronal growth and development could contribute to many of the biological effects associated with Menkes disease.
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PMID:Menkes protein contributes to the function of peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase. 1248 45

The human copper chaperone HAH1 transports copper to the Menkes and Wilson proteins, which are copper-translocating P-type ATPases located in the trans-Golgi apparatus and believed to provide copper for important enzymes such as ceruloplasmin, tyrosinase, and peptidylglycine monooxygenase. Although a substantial amount of structural data exist for HAH1 and its yeast and bacterial homologues, details of the copper coordination remain unclear and suggest the presence of two protein-derived cysteine ligands and a third exogenous thiol ligand. Here we report the preparation and reconstitution of HAH1 with Cu(I) using a protocol that minimizes the use of thiol reagents believed to be the source of the third ligand. We show by x-ray absorption spectroscopy that this reconstitution protocol generates an occupied Cu(I) binding site with linear biscysteinate coordination geometry, as evidenced by (i) an intense edge absorption centered at 8982.5 eV, with energy and intensity identical to the rigorously linear two-coordinate model complex bis-2,3,5,6-tetramethylbenzene thiolate Cu(I) and (ii) an EXAFS spectrum that could be fit to two Cu-S interactions at 2.16 A, a distance typical of digonal Cu(I) coordination. Binding of exogenous ligands (GSH, dithiothreitol, and tris-(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine) to the Cu(I) was investigated. When GSH or dithiothreitol was added to the chaperone during the reconstitution procedure, the resulting Cu(I)- HAH1 remained two-coordinate, whereas the addition of the phosphine during reconstitution elicited a three-coordinate species. When the exogenous ligands were titrated into the Cu(I)-HAH1, all formed three-coordinate adducts but with differing affinities. Thus, GSH and dithiothreitol showed weaker binding, with estimated KD values in the range 10-25 mm, whereas tris-(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine showed stronger affinity, with a KD value of <5 mm. The implications of these findings for mechanisms of copper transport are discussed.
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PMID:X-ray absorption spectroscopy of the copper chaperone HAH1 reveals a linear two-coordinate Cu(I) center capable of adduct formation with exogenous thiols and phosphines. 1268 48

Copper is a cofactor for many cellular enzymes and transporters. It can be loaded onto secreted and endomembrane cuproproteins by translocation from the cytosol into membrane-bound organelles by ATP7A or ATP7B transporters, the genes for which are mutated in the copper imbalance syndromes Menkes disease and Wilson disease, respectively. Endomembrane cuproproteins are thought to incorporate copper stably on transit through the trans-Golgi network, in which ATP7A accumulates by dynamic cycling through early endocytic compartments. Here we show that the pigment-cell-specific cuproenzyme tyrosinase acquires copper only transiently and inefficiently within the trans-Golgi network of mouse melanocytes. To catalyse melanin synthesis, tyrosinase is subsequently reloaded with copper within specialized organelles called melanosomes. Copper is supplied to melanosomes by ATP7A, a cohort of which localizes to melanosomes in a biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles complex-1 (BLOC-1)-dependent manner. These results indicate that cell-type-specific localization of a metal transporter is required to sustain metallation of an endomembrane cuproenzyme, providing a mechanism for exquisite spatial control of metalloenzyme activity. Moreover, because BLOC-1 subunits are mutated in subtypes of the genetic disease Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome, these results also show that defects in copper transporter localization contribute to hypopigmentation, and hence perhaps other systemic defects, in Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome.
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PMID:Cell-specific ATP7A transport sustains copper-dependent tyrosinase activity in melanosomes. 1865 Aug 8

Copper is found in all living organisms and is a crucial trace element in redox chemistry, growth and development. It is important for the function of several enzymes and proteins involved in energy metabolism, respiration, and DNA synthesis, notably cytochrome oxidase, superoxide dismutase, ascorbate oxidase, and tyrosinase. The major functions of copper-biological molecules involve oxidation-reduction reactions in which they react directly with molecular oxygen to produce free radicals. Therefore, copper requires tightly regulated homeostatic mechanisms to ensure adequate supplies without any toxic effects. Overload or deficiency of copper is associated, respectively, with Wilson disease (WD) and Menkes disease (MD), which are of genetic origin. Researches on Menkes and Wilson disorders have provided useful insights in the field of copper homeostasis and in particular into the understanding of intracellular trafficking and distribution of copper at molecular levels. Therapies based on metal supplementation with copper histidine or removal of copper excess by means of specific copper chelators are currently effective in treating MD and WD, respectively. Copper chelation therapy is now attracting much attention for the investigation and treatment of various neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer, Parkinson and CreutzfeldtJakob. An excess of copper appears to be an essential co-factor for angiogenesis. Moreover, elevated levels of copper have been found in many types of human cancers, including prostate, breast, colon, lung, and brain. On these basis, the employment of copper chelators has been reported to be of therapeutic value in the treatment of several types of cancers as anti-angiogenic molecules. More recently, mixtures of copper chelators with copper salts have been found to act as efficient proteasome inhibitors and apoptosis inducers, specifically in cancer cells. Moreover, following the worldwide success of platinum(II) compounds in cancer chemotherapy, several families of individual copper complexes have been studied as potential antitumor agents. These investigations, revealing the occurrence of mechanisms of action quite different from platinum drugs, head toward the development of new anticancer metallodrugs with improved specificity and decreased toxic side effects.
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PMID:Copper in diseases and treatments, and copper-based anticancer strategies. 1962 97


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