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Altered copper metabolism in cultured cells from human Menkes' syndrome and mottled mouse mutants

Version 2 2024-06-03, 11:04
Version 1 2017-08-01, 15:07
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 11:04 authored by J Camakaris, DM Danks, Leigh AcklandLeigh Ackland, E Cartwright, P Borger, RG Cotton
Cultured cells of a variety of different types from human Menkes' syndrome patients and brindled mouse mutants exhibit similarly altered responses to changes in extracellular copper concentration. This suggests that the mutations in the mouse and human are very similar and that mutant gene expression is occurring in many different tissues. Intracellular copper levels are markedly elevated in mutant cells in normal medium and in medium containing a hundred-fold higher copper. Some cell lines from heterozygotes possess elevated copper levels. Elevated extracellular copper and zinc are significantly more toxic to mutant cells. Mutant cells exhibit normal rates of uptake of copper-64 over a 10-min period but abnormally high accumulation over 24 hr and low rates of efflux. Menkes' fibroblasts become saturated with copper-64 at lower extracellular concentrations than for normal fibroblasts. These data support the idea of enhanced intracellular binding in mutant cells.

History

Journal

Biochemical genetics

Volume

18

Pagination

117-131

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

0006-2928

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN.1 Other journal article

Copyright notice

1980, Plenum Publishing Corporation

Issue

1-2

Publisher

Springer

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