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)

Type IX of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (E-D IX) and the Menkes syndrome are X-linked recessively inherited disorders characterized by abnormalities in copper metabolism. These abnormalities are associated with a severe reduction in the activity of lysyl oxidase, the extracellular copper enzyme that initiates crosslinking of collagens and elastin. No increase in this deficient enzyme activity was obtained when culture media from fibroblasts of patients with E-D IX or the Menkes syndrome were incubated with copper under various conditions in vitro. A distinct, although small, increase in lysyl oxidase activity was obtained, however, when copper-supplemented media were used during culturing of the fibroblasts, although even under these conditions, the enzyme activity in the media from the affected cells remained markedly below that of the controls. Immunoprecipitation, dot-blotting, and immunoperoxidase staining experiments with antisera to human lysyl oxidase indicated that fibroblasts from patients with E-D IX or the Menkes syndrome do not secrete into their medium, or contain inside the cell, any significant amounts of a copper-deficient, catalytically inactive lysyl oxidase protein. These findings appear to be consistent with the hypothesis that synthesis of the lysyl oxidase protein itself is impaired. The possibility is not excluded, however, that a copper-deficient enzyme protein may be synthesized in normal amounts but become degraded very rapidly inside the cell. The failure to obtain any large increase in the deficient lysyl oxidase activity upon various forms of copper administration suggests that it may not be possible to obtain any significant improvement in the connective tissue manifestations of these disorders by copper therapy.
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PMID:Type IX Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and Menkes syndrome: the decrease in lysyl oxidase activity is associated with a corresponding deficiency in the enzyme protein. 955 68

Menkes syndrome is an X-linked genetic copper deficiency that is usually fatal in early childhood. Milder variants exist, including occipital horn syndrome, which is primarily a connective tissue disorder. Mutations of the mottled locus in mice produce a wide range of copper-deficient phenotypes that are good models for human diseases. Understanding the nature of the defects has been greatly increased as a result of the identification of the gene affected in Menkes syndrome. The gene spans approximately 140 kilobases, contains 23 exons, and encodes a copper-transporting ATPase termed MNK that is thought to be involved in copper efflux from cells. More recent studies show that MNK is located primarily in the trans-Golgi compartment of Chinese hamster ovary cells. Copper-resistant cells overexpress MNK and can efflux more copper than parental cells, consistent with the copper efflux role proposed for MNK. Patients with Menkes syndrome are predicted to have little or no MNK activity, whereas patients with occipital horn syndrome have less severe mutations and some residual MNK activity is predicted. Similarly, the mottled mice mutants have a range of mutations in the MNK gene homologue. Complete loss of MNK, however, produces a fetal lethal phenotype in mice. A model is proposed to explain the wide range of phenotypes exhibited by the different mouse mutants. Further research into the cell biology of copper transport is expected to reveal more about the molecular basis of copper homeostasis.
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PMID:Menkes syndrome and animal models. 958 46

The Menkes protein (MNK or ATP7A) is an important component of the mammalian copper transport pathway and is defective in Menkes disease, a fatal X-linked disorder of copper transport. To study the structure and function of this protein and to elucidate its role in cellular copper homeostasis, a cDNA construct encoding the full-length MNK protein was cloned into a mammalian expression vector under the control of the CMV promoter. Transfection of this plasmid construct into CHO-K1 cells yielded clones that expressed MNK at varying levels. Detailed characterization of four clones showed that an increase in MNK protein expression led to a corresponding increase in the level of copper resistance of the cells. Subcellular localization studies showed that in the parental CHO-K1 and the transfected cell lines, MNK was located in a post-Golgi compartment which, based on immunogold electron microscopic analyses, most likely represented the trans -Golgi network (TGN). When the extracellular copper concentration was increased, MNK in the clones as well as in CHO-K1 cells was redistributed to the cytoplasm and plasma membrane, but returned to the TGN under basal, low copper conditions. This report presents the first ultrastructural evidence for the association of MNK with vesicles within the cell and with the TGN and plasma membrane. It also demonstrates the stable expression of a functional MNK protein from a cDNA construct in mammalian cells, as well as the copper-induced redistribution of MNK in a cell line (CHO-K1) that was not selected for copper resistance or overexpression of MNK.
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PMID:Functional analysis and intracellular localization of the human menkes protein (MNK) stably expressed from a cDNA construct in Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO-K1). 966 72

Cloning of the gene defective in the X-linked neurodegenerative disorder Menkes disease led to a cascade of new findings. Besides giving a better understanding of the intracellular copper homeostasis, these findings had important consequences from a clinical point of view. Today the underlying genetic defect has been described in several patients affected by one of the three hereditary disorders of copper metabolism: Menkes disease, occipital horn syndrome and wilson disease. In this review we discuss mainly Menkes disease and the impact of the recent findings on the diagnosis of this disorder.
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PMID:Menkes disease: underlying genetic defect and new diagnostic possibilities. 972 40

Menkes' disease is a fatal, X-linked, copper deficiency disorder that results from defective copper efflux from intestinal cells and inadequate copper delivery to other tissues, leading to deficiencies of critical copper-dependent enzymes. Wilson's disease is an autosomally inherited, copper toxicosis disorder resulting from defective biliary excretion of copper, which leads to copper accumulation in the liver. The ATP7A and ATP7B genes that are defective in patients with Menkes' and Wilson's diseases, respectively, encode transmembrane, P-type ATPase proteins (ATP7A or MNK and ATP7B or WND, respectively) that function to translocate copper across cellular membranes. In this study, the cDNAs derived from a normal human ATP7A gene and the murine ATP7B homologue, Atp7b, were separately transfected into an immortalized fibroblast cell line obtained from a Menkes' disease patient. Both MNK and WND expressed from plasmid constructs were able to correct the copper accumulation and copper retention phenotype of these cells. However, the two proteins responded differently to elevated extracellular copper levels. Although MNK showed copper-induced trafficking from the trans-Golgi network to the plasma membrane, in the same cell line the intracellular location of WND did not appear to be affected by elevated copper.
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PMID:Correction of the copper transport defect of Menkes patient fibroblasts by expression of the Menkes and Wilson ATPases. 981 47

The group of X-linked mottled (Atp7aMo) mutations in mice is described. A normal gene encodes a copper-binding P-type ATPase. Mutant animals have the disturbance in copper metabolism, hemizygous males (Mo/y) die between 14-18 days of life, heterozygous females (Mo/+) are normal and fertile. This kind of copper metabolic defect is observed also in other animal and in human. In human Menkes disease caused by X-linked Atp7a mutant gene leads to death in early childhood. Because of is 89% of homology between Atp7aMo gene and Atp7a locus in human, mottled mutations are an excellent model for Menkes disease.
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PMID:[Mice with mottled mutation--a model for defective copper metabolism in humans]. 985 76

Menkes disease is an X-linked, recessive disorder of copper metabolism that occurs in approximately 1 in 200,000 live births. The condition is characterized by skeletal abnormalities, severe mental retardation, neurologic degeneration, and patient mortality in early childhood. The symptoms of Menkes disease result from a deficiency of serum copper and copper-dependent enzymes. A candidate gene for the disease has been isolated and designated MNK. The MNK gene codes for a P-type cation transporting ATPase, based on homology to known P-type ATPases and in vitro experimentation. cDNA clones of MNK in Menkes patients show diminished or absented hybridization in northern blot experiments. The Menkes protein functions to export excess intracellular copper and activates upon Cu(I) binding to the six metal-binding repeats in the amino-terminal domain. The loss of Menkes protein activity blocks the export of dietary copper from the gastrointestinal tract and causes the copper deficiency associated with Menkes disease. Each of the Menkes protein amino-terminal repeats contains a conserved -X-Met-X-Cys-X-X-Cys- motif (where X is any amino acid). These metal-binding repeats are conserved in other cation exporting ATPases involved in metal metabolism and in proteins involved in cellular defense against heavy metals in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. An overview of copper metabolism in humans and a discussion of our understanding of the molecular basis of cellular copper homeostasis is presented. This forms the basis for a discussion of Menkes disease and the protein deficit in this disease.
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PMID:Molecular mechanisms of copper metabolism and the role of the Menkes disease protein. 989 Jan 94

Menkes disease is a fatal X-linked disorder of copper metabolism. The gene defective in Menkes disease (ATP7A) encodes a copper transporting P-type ATPase (MNK or ATP7A) with six copper-binding domains at its N-terminus. MNK is normally localized to the trans -Golgi network in cultured cells, but relocates to the plasma membrane in the presence of elevated extracellular copper. In this study, the role of the six copper-binding domains on copper-induced redistribution is investigated. In a recombinant clone, when all the wild-type copper-binding motifs are mutated from GMXCXXC to GMXSXXS and the cells grown in medium containing elevated copper, relocalization of the recombinant protein to the plasma membrane was not observed. Using the same assay with any one of the six copper-binding domains intact, MNK moves to the plasma membrane in a way indistinguishable from the wild-type protein. Therefore, the copper-binding domains are vital for MNK trafficking and only a single domain is sufficient for this redistribution to occur.
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PMID:Characterization of the Menkes protein copper-binding domains and their role in copper-induced protein relocalization. 1040 Sep 94

Menkes disease is an X-linked disorder of copper metabolism. An overall copper deficiency reduces the activity of copper-dependent enzymes accounting for the clinical presentation of affected individuals. The Menkes gene product (MNK) is a P-type ATPase and is considered to be the main copper efflux protein in most cells. The protein is located primarily at the trans -Golgi network (TGN), but relocalizes to the plasma membrane in elevated copper conditions to expel the excess copper from the cell. Here we report the first missense mutation which causes mild Menkes disease, a mutation in a successfully copper-treated classical Menkes patient and the effect of each mutation on the localization of MNK within the cell. Using western blot analysis, MNK was detectable in cells from both patients, but appeared to be mislocalized in the treated case. In the mild Menkes patient, the protein appeared to be located in the TGN but failed to redistribute towards the cell periphery in response to copper. This is the first description of a mutation in a Menkes patient which affects the trafficking of MNK, and the loss of this process is consistent with the clinical phenotype.
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PMID:Defective copper-induced trafficking and localization of the Menkes protein in patients with mild and copper-treated classical Menkes disease. 1040 Oct 4

Copper is a heavy metal ion essential for the activity of a variety of enzymes in the body. In excess, copper is a very toxic ion and therefore efficient regulation of its metabolism is required. This is dramatically illustrated by the genetic disorders X-linked Menkes disease and autosomal recessive Wilson's disease. In 1993, both the Menkes and Wilson's genes were isolated and it was found that these genes encode homologous cation copper transporting P-type ATPase proteins. The Menkes protein (ATP7A) is expressed in most tissues, except liver. In contrast, the Wilson's protein (ATP7B) is abundantly expressed in liver. Intracellular localization of those proteins was investigated. Both ATP7A and ATP7B are localized in the trans-Golgi network and post-Golgi vesicular compartment (PGVC) in the cell. This intracellular localization was altered by the copper content present in the cell. This result may support the hypothesis that ATP7A and ATP7B are involved in cellular copper transport and those proteins could be suitable models for elucidating intracellular copper metabolism.
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PMID:Intracellular localization of the Menkes and Wilson's disease proteins and their role in intracellular copper transport. 1045 1


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