(Press-News.org) Contact information: Poul Nissen
pn@mb.au.dk
45-28-99-22-95
Aarhus University
How the cells remove copper
We are fundamentally dependent on the presence of copper in the cells of the body. Copper is actually part of the body's energy conversion and protective mechanisms against oxygen radicals, as well as part of the immune system, and it also has great importance for the formation of e.g. hormones and neurotransmitters.
Imbalance in the body's copper level has therefore a number of serious consequences for our health, as can be seen with the disorder Wilson's disease, where the liver accumulates copper in harmful quantities, and the very serious Menkes syndrome, where a congenital defect in the cell's copper charge of key enzymes causes e.g. neurological defects, muscular disorders, low blood pressure and osteoporosis, and is typically fatal within the first three years of life.
Both Menkes syndrome and Wilson's disease are caused by defects in the mechanism that regulates the copper levels in the cells.
A mechanism which researchers at the Danish National Research Centre PUMPkin at Aarhus University have now moved a step closer to understand.
They have shown that the protein that is responsible for the excretion of copper in the cells of the body makes use of a unique transport mechanism.
The results have recently been published in the recognised scientific journal Nature Structural and Molecular Biology.
"The copper pump is a protein that has the function of removing the toxic surplus of copper from the cells. The protein is located partially inside the cell, and partially in the surrounding cell membrane. The parts of the protein which are located inside the cell function almost as a series of cogs, which interlace with one another. Putting it simply, when the cogs rotate they draw on the part of the protein located in the cell membrane, and in this manner a tiny passage opens and closes through the membrane. The copper is pumped out through the passage," says PhD student Oleg Sitsel, co-author of the article.
Crystallisation shows the protein's function
The copper pump protein that ensures the transport of copper ions through the cell membrane has been mapped by means of crystallisation.
"The protein passes through a phased cycle to perform the pump function.
We have crystallised the protein in different stages and can thus determine precisely when the passage through the cell membrane is open, so the copper ions can be pumped out.
In other words, we have mapped the copper ions' exit route," explains postdoc Pontus Gourdon who is part of the team - which also comprises PhD student Oleg Sitsel, PhD student Daniel Mattle, laboratory technician Tetyana Klymchuk, laboratory technician Anna Marie Nielsen and Professor Poul Nissen - who have delivered Aarhus University's contribution to the study.
The copper pump gets its fuel from the ATP molecule, which supplies the energy for most of the energy-demanding processes in the body.
Bacteria can be polluted with copper
The results cannot at the present time be translated into a specific treatment, but the new knowledge is nonetheless extremely important for the basic understanding of the causes of diseases related to copper imbalances and why they arise.
In addition, our understanding of the mechanisms of the copper pump can also be used to develop new antibiotics, which can be targeted at blocking the copper pump in harmful bacteria and thereby poisoning the bacteria.
"Now knowing how the pump transports copper out through the cell membrane, we are also closer to being able to say how the copper pump can be taken out of service, so that the copper level in the cell reaches toxic levels. This knowledge can be used in the fight against harmful bacteria by preventing them from excreting themselves with their copper," says Oleg Sitsel.
The copper pump protein, which the researchers have studied, is extracted from the bacterium Legionella pneumophila, which normally can cause the deadly Legionnaires' disease, but which is here cloned in a harmless E-coli strain.
In 2011 the basic properties of the copper pump were mapped – also at Aarhus University – but it is not until now that the researchers have shown exactly how copper is released by the pump. There is still some research to be done into the various phases of the copper pump before the entire puzzle is completed.
INFORMATION:
For more information, please contact
Professor Poul Nissen
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics
Aarhus University
pn@mb.au.dk
+45 8715 5508/2899 2295
Postdoctoral Fellow Pontus Gourdon
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics
Aarhus University
pgo@mb.au.dk
+45 5033 9990
PhD Student Oleg Sitsel
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics
Aarhus University
oleg@mb.au.dk
+45 5039 5959
How the cells remove copper
2013-12-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New research provides insight into epilepsy
2013-12-20
New research provides insight into epilepsy
Jørgen Kjems and Morten Trillingsgaard Venø, Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics and the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Centre (iNANO), contribute to an article on microRNA-128 just published in Science. ...
EARTH Magazine: Navigating the risks of hazard research
2013-12-20
EARTH Magazine: Navigating the risks of hazard research
Alexandria, VA – When individuals die in a natural disaster or property damage is costly, can anyone be blamed? After the 2012 conviction of six Italian geoscientists on manslaughter charges related ...
Half of National Lottery in Spain sold at Christmas
2013-12-20
Half of National Lottery in Spain sold at Christmas
Sales of the National Lottery have fallen for the last five years, which shows that even the most traditional games have been affected by the economic crisis. In 2012, it collected 5.0163 billion euros, down 4.8% from 2011 ...
Neurobiology: The logistics of learning
2013-12-20
Neurobiology: The logistics of learning
Learning requires constant reconfiguration of the connections between nerve cells. Two new studies now yield new insights into the molecular mechanisms that underlie the learning process.
Learning and memory ...
Increasing personal savings, the 'Groundhog Day' way
2013-12-20
Increasing personal savings, the 'Groundhog Day' way
How a cyclical concept of time can boost your bank account
Thinking about time as a cycle of recurring experiences — a reality Bill Murray's character knows all too well in the movie ...
Early detection of blinding eye disease could be as easy as scanning a barcode
2013-12-20
Early detection of blinding eye disease could be as easy as scanning a barcode
New hand-held optical device to catch early signs of retinal disease
New data for engineering immune cells shows early promise in solid tumors
2013-12-20
New data for engineering immune cells shows early promise in solid tumors
PHILADELPHIA — Engineered immune cells, called CARTmeso cells, designed to direct antitumor immune responses toward tumors that carry a protein called mesothelin, showed ...
Sugar cane fires in Louisiana
2013-12-20
Sugar cane fires in Louisiana
According to KATC Channel 3 in Lafayette, LA on December 17, 2013 , thick plumes of smoke are visible for miles around Acadiana (the mostly French region of Louisiana in the southern part of the state). They aren't major fires, but instead ...
Parasitic DNA proliferates in aging tissues
2013-12-20
Parasitic DNA proliferates in aging tissues
The genomes of organisms from humans to corn are replete with "parasitic" strands of DNA that, when not suppressed, copy themselves and spread throughout the genome, potentially affecting health. Earlier this year Brown University researchers ...
Common disorders: It's not the genes themselves, but how they are controlled
2013-12-20
Common disorders: It's not the genes themselves, but how they are controlled
Case Western Reserve identifies multiple DNA changes cause disease, offering new drug targets
Many rare disorders are caused by gene mutation, like sickle cell anemia. Yet ...