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Annotation


Sparks DL, Schreurs BG. Trace amounts of copper in water induce beta-amyloid plaques and learning deficits in a rabbit model of Alzheimer's disease. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Sep 16;100(19):11065-9. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plagues Rabbit Brain

Comment by:  Chris Exley
Submitted 29 August 2003  |  Permalink Posted 3 September 2003

The PNAS paper is a follow-up of a similar study published in JAD (Vol 4, 523)in which a component of normal tapwater was suggested to contribute towards cholesterol-induced AD-like pathology. The critical aspect of both papers is that this 'component' was found to potentiate the effects attributed to the presence of additional cholesterol in the rabbit chow. The authors, and indeed those commenting on this work in 'Science' and elsewhere are premature in attributing this potentiation directly to copper. Either of the papers neither demonstrate an increase in systemic cholesterol nor do they show any changes in copper homeostasis. (Why were these analyses not carried out !?)No mention is made of how much copper or cholesterol was already present in the rabbit chow. No mention is made of how the additional cholesterol was incorporated in the diet nor was any information given on how the pH of the drinking water was controlled (distilled water + copper sulphate will be acidic). In addition we do not know whether the amount of cholesterol-supplemented feed that was eaten by the...  Read more

  Primary News: Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plagues Rabbit Brain

Comment by:  Craig Atwood, Gemma Casadesus, George Perry, ARF Advisor (Disclosure), Mark A. Smith (Disclosure)
Submitted 5 September 2003  |  Permalink Posted 5 September 2003

Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plaques in Rabbit Brain
The article by Sparks and Schreurs provides evidence that copper is the water contaminant responsible for increased neuronal and extracellular accumulation of amyloid previously reported by these workers in rabbits (Sparks et al., 2002). These are intriguing observations, given the well-characterized interaction of copper with Aβ (Atwood et al., 1998; Dong et al., 2003), and while the exact biochemical interaction among these molecules (copper, Aβ and cholesterol) remains to be determined, it is clear that cholesterol and copper play an important role in amyloid deposition.

The relevance of these neuropathological observations to humans is indicated by the identification of cognitive deficits in copper-treated animals. That these cognitive and neuropathological changes occur at concentrations of...  Read more


  Primary News: Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plagues Rabbit Brain

Comment by:  Vincent Marchesi, ARF Advisor
Submitted 7 September 2003  |  Permalink Posted 9 September 2003

I have to agree completely with the comments of Exley. The illustrations purporting to demonstrate senile plaques are not convincing. Antibody immunoreactivity seems greater in some sets of animal than others, but without actual measurements of copper levels, it is hard to decide whether copper has anything to do with the increased antibody reactivity. Measuring enzyme levels as surrogate markers of metal levels are quite inadequate. I can't judge the significance of the animal conditioning data, but I don't believe the this rabbit model has been characterized well enough to take them seriously. The claim that low levels of copper and cholesterol feeding are synergistic in enhancing Abeta production and amyloid plaque formation in rabbits implies a cause and effect relationship which remains unproven, and the implications of these findings, from a public health point of view, are too important to rest on such inadequate data.

View all comments by Vincent Marchesi

  Primary News: Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plagues Rabbit Brain

Comment by:  Victorio Rodriguez (Disclosure)
Submitted 6 September 2003  |  Permalink Posted 12 September 2003

I think that copper is a neurotoxic substance that displaces the zinc in the cell-specific carbonic anhydrase enzymes in the brain, leading to their death and to the production of amyloid plaques. Cell-specific carbonic anhydrase enzymes in the brain produces hydrogen ions which serve as the fuel of the ion pump that maintains the integrity of the cell membrane. Depolarization of the cell membrane causes the influx of water, Na+, Ca++, and other neurotoxic materials, such as aluminum, lead, and iron, that displace the zinc from the cell-specific carbonic anhydrase enzymes—cellular death follows. Decreased levels of cell-specific carbonic anhydrase lead to cell death.

For references see WIPO publication #WO 03/070167 A2; I am the author.

References:
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) publication #WO 03/070167 A2—published on August 28, 2003. "Therapeutic and Prophylactic Treatment of Aging and Disorders of Aging which includes Alzheimer's Disease."

View all comments by Victorio Rodriguez


  Primary News: Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plagues Rabbit Brain

Comment by:  Craig Atwood, Gemma Casadesus, George Perry, ARF Advisor (Disclosure), Mark A. Smith (Disclosure)
Submitted 17 September 2003  |  Permalink Posted 17 September 2003

Copper: A Role in AD?
Recent exciting findings suggest that copper in drinking water is able to exacerbate the amyloid pathology and an associated learning deficit in the cholesterol-fed rabbit model of Alzheimer's disease (Sparks et al., 2002; Sparks and Schreurs, 2003). Such data, together with previous studies linking aluminum (Crapper et al., 1973), zinc (Cuajungco et al., 2000), and iron (Smith et al., 1997) to Alzheimer's disease, suggest that metals may play a key role in disease pathogenesis (Perry et al., 2003). However, while aluminum (Pratico et al., 2002), and now copper (Sparks et...  Read more

  Primary News: Coping with Copper—Minute Amount of Metal Plagues Rabbit Brain

Comment by:  Rebecca J. Henderson (Disclosure)
Submitted 14 January 2004  |  Permalink Posted 14 January 2004

Comment by Rebecca J. Henderson and James R. Connor
Much attention has been paid to the link between AD and metal ions. These studies go back to the imbalance of iron found in the brain in AD and the contribution of iron to oxidative stress [1], and even earlier to the idea that aluminum toxicity was involved in the pathogenesis of AD. More recently, data have been presented indicating that β-amyloid has a relatively high binding affinity for zinc, iron, and copper. Metal complexing agents are under investigation as therapeutic agents in Alzheimer’s disease [2,3]. Because metals are acquired through dietary and environmental sources, one mechanism by which metal availability could be manipulated is through the diet. Three recent papers published in PNAS attempt to elucidate more clearly copper’s effect, if any, on the disease state. Two of the papers [4,5] propose beneficial actions for copper, while work by Sparks and Schruers [6] claims that dietary copper exacerbates the disease.

Phinney et al. use a potentially powerful technique of crossing two transgenic...  Read more

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