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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 295: C708-C721, 2008. First published June 25, 2008; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00029.2008
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MEMBRANE TRANSPORTERS, ION CHANNELS, AND PUMPS

Copper is taken up efficiently from albumin and {alpha}2-macroglobulin by cultured human cells by more than one mechanism

Mizue Moriya,1 Yi-Hsuan Ho,1 Anne Grana,1 Linh Nguyen,1 Arrissa Alvarez,1 Rita Jamil,1 M. Leigh Ackland,2 Agnes Michalczyk,2 Pia Hamer,1 Danny Ramos,1 Stephen Kim,1 Julian F. B. Mercer,2 and Maria C. Linder1

1Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Institute for Molecular Biology and Nutrition, California State University, Fullerton, California; and 2Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Deakin University, Burwood, Victoria, Australia

Submitted 22 January 2008 ; accepted in final form 19 June 2008

Ionic copper entering blood plasma binds tightly to albumin and the macroglobulin transcuprein. It then goes primarily to the liver and kidney except in lactation, where a large portion goes directly to the mammary gland. Little is known about how this copper is taken up from these plasma proteins. To examine this, the kinetics of uptake from purified human albumin and {alpha}2-macroglobulin, and the effects of inhibitors, were measured using human hepatic (HepG2) and mammary epithelial (PMC42) cell lines. At physiological concentrations (3–6 µM), both cell types took up copper from these proteins independently and at rates similar to each other and to those for Cu-dihistidine or Cu-nitrilotriacetate (NTA). Uptakes from {alpha}2-macroglobulin indicated a single saturable system in each cell type, but with different kinetics, and 65–80% inhibition by Ag(I) in HepG2 cells but not PMC42 cells. Uptake kinetics for Cu-albumin were more complex and also differed with cell type (as was the case for Cu-histidine and NTA), and there was little or no inhibition by Ag(I). High Fe(II) concentrations (100–500 µM) inhibited copper uptake from albumin by 20–30% in both cell types and that from {alpha}2-macroglobulin by 0–30%, and there was no inhibition of the latter by Mn(II) or Zn(II). We conclude that the proteins mainly responsible for the plasma-exchangeable copper pool deliver the metal to mammalian cells efficiently and by several different mechanisms. {alpha}2-Macroglobulin delivers it primarily to copper transporter 1 in hepatic cells but not mammary epithelial cells, and additional as-yet-unidentified copper transporters or systems for uptake from these proteins remain to be identified.

transcuprein; uptake kinetics; iron competition; silver competition; HepG2 cells; PMC42 cells



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. C. Linder, Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry, California State Univ., 800 N. State College Blvd., Fullerton, CA 92834-6866 (e-mail: mlinder{at}fullerton.edu)




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J. H. Kaplan and S. Lutsenko
Copper Transport in Mammalian Cells: Special Care for a Metal with Special Needs
J. Biol. Chem., September 18, 2009; 284(38): 25461 - 25465.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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