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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Phinney AL, Drisaldi B, Schmidt SD, Lugowski S, Coronado V, Liang Y, Horne P, Yang J, Sekoulidis J, Coomaraswamy J, Chishti MA, Cox DW, Mathews PM, Nixon RA, Carlson GA, St George-Hyslop P, Westaway D. In vivo reduction of amyloid-beta by a mutant copper transporter. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Nov 25;100(24):14193-8. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Copper to the Rescue?

Comment by:  Mary Reid
Submitted 19 November 2003  |  Permalink Posted 19 November 2003

Cobbold et al. find that Menkes disease protein is enriched in the plasma membrane in the presence of excess copper, and that trafficking of MNK from the TGN to the plasma membrane is inhibited by Cdc42 and WASP. Cdc42 and N-WASP are increased in AD (Zhu et al., 2000; Kitamura et al., 2003).

Might Aβ become a copper transporter when MNK remains at the TGN? Might the addition of copper enable relocalization of MNK to the plasma membrane, thus reducing the need for Aβ to act as a copper transporter?

References:
Cobbold C, Ponnambalam S, Francis MJ, Monaco AP. Novel membrane traffic steps regulate the exocytosis of the Menkes disease ATPase. Hum Mol Genet. 2002 Nov 1;11(23):2855-66. Abstract

Zhu X, Raina AK, Boux H, Simmons ZL, Takeda A, Smith MA. Activation of oncogenic pathways in degenerating...  Read more


  Comment by:  Andre Delacourte, ARF Advisor
Submitted 26 November 2003  |  Permalink Posted 26 November 2003
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: Copper to the Rescue?

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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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

TgCRND8 (Chishti, 2001)[(C3H/HeJ x C57BL/6J) x C3H/HeJ] females were paired with males homozygous for the txJ mutation (C3HeB/FeJ-Atp7btxJ (txJ) mice). The txJ mice harbor an autosomal recessive mutation in the gene encoding CuATPase7b (Coronado, 2001). All female offspring confirmed to be APP-positive were backcrossed with homozygous txJ males to produce experimental groups.

For Immunohistochemistry the following antibodies were used: rabbit anti-cow glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, Roche (distributed by Chemicon); diluted 1:1,000), mouse anti-microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2, Sigma; diluted 1:20), anti-NF200, and mouse anti-synaptophysin (DAKO; diluted 1:500). Amyloid was visualized by using the monoclonal antibody 6F/3D (DAKO; diluted 1:400) following a 5-min formic acid treatment.

Western blot analysis was carried out with antibody C1/6.1 [holo-APP and APP-CTF (42)] or antibody 22C11 (diethylamine-soluble sAPP, Chemicon, diluted 1:1000).

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