Tapiero Haim, Tew Kenneth D
Université de Paris - Faculté de Pharmacie CNRS UMR 8612, 5, rue Jean-Baptiste-Clément, 94200, Chatenay-Malabry, France.
Biomed Pharmacother. 2003 Nov;57(9):399-411. doi: 10.1016/s0753-3322(03)00081-7.
Zinc is one of the most abundant nutritionally essential elements in the human body. It is found in all body tissues with 85% of the whole body zinc in muscle and bone, 11% in the skin and the liver and the remaining in all the other tissues. In multicellular organisms, virtually all zinc is intracellular, 30-40% is located in the nucleus, 50% in the cytoplasm, organelles and specialized vesicles (for digestive enzymes or hormone storage) and the remainder in the cell membrane. Zinc intake ranges from 107 to 231 micromol/d depending on the source, and human zinc requirement is estimated at 15 mg/d. Zinc has been shown to be essential to the structure and function of a large number of macromolecules and for over 300 enzymic reactions. It has both catalytic and structural roles in enzymes, while in zinc finger motifs, it provides a scaffold that organizes protein sub-domains for the interaction with either DNA or other proteins. It is critical for the function of a number of metalloproteins, inducing members of oxido-reductase, hydrolase ligase, lyase family and has co-activating functions with copper in superoxide dismutase or phospholipase C. The zinc ion (Zn(++)) does not participate in redox reactions, which makes it a stable ion in a biological medium whose potential is in constant flux. Zinc ions are hydrophilic and do not cross cell membranes by passive diffusion. In general, transport has been described as having both saturable and non-saturable components, depending on the Zn(II) concentrations involved. Zinc ions exist primarily in the form of complexes with proteins and nucleic acids and participate in all aspects of intermediary metabolism, transmission and regulation of the expression of genetic information, storage, synthesis and action of peptide hormones and structural maintenance of chromatin and biomembranes.
锌是人体中含量最丰富的必需营养元素之一。它存在于人体所有组织中,其中85%的全身锌存在于肌肉和骨骼中,11%存在于皮肤和肝脏中,其余分布在所有其他组织中。在多细胞生物中,几乎所有的锌都在细胞内,30 - 40%位于细胞核中,50%位于细胞质、细胞器和特殊囊泡(用于消化酶或激素储存)中,其余在细胞膜中。锌的摄入量因来源而异,范围为107至231微摩尔/天,据估计人体锌需求量为15毫克/天。锌已被证明对大量大分子的结构和功能以及300多种酶促反应至关重要。它在酶中兼具催化和结构作用,而在锌指基序中,它提供了一个支架,用于组织蛋白质亚结构域与DNA或其他蛋白质相互作用。它对许多金属蛋白的功能至关重要,包括氧化还原酶、水解酶连接酶、裂合酶家族的成员,并且在超氧化物歧化酶或磷脂酶C中与铜具有共激活功能。锌离子(Zn(++))不参与氧化还原反应,这使其在电位不断变化的生物介质中成为一种稳定的离子。锌离子具有亲水性,不会通过被动扩散穿过细胞膜。一般来说,根据所涉及的Zn(II)浓度,锌的转运被描述为具有饱和和不饱和成分。锌离子主要以与蛋白质和核酸的复合物形式存在,并参与中间代谢、遗传信息表达的传递和调节、肽激素的储存、合成和作用以及染色质和生物膜的结构维持等各个方面。