Moriya Mizue, Ho Yi-Hsuan, Grana Anne, Nguyen Linh, Alvarez Arrissa, Jamil Rita, Ackland M Leigh, Michalczyk Agnes, Hamer Pia, Ramos Danny, Kim Stephen, Mercer Julian F B, Linder Maria C
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Institute for Molecular Biology and Nutrition, California State University, Fullerton, California 92834-6866, USA.
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2008 Sep;295(3):C708-21. doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.00029.2008. Epub 2008 Jun 25.
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 muM), 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 microM) 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.
进入血浆的离子铜会与白蛋白和巨球蛋白转铜蛋白紧密结合。然后,它主要会去往肝脏和肾脏,但在哺乳期除外,此时大部分铜会直接去往乳腺。关于这种铜是如何从这些血浆蛋白中被摄取的,目前所知甚少。为了研究这一问题,我们使用人肝癌细胞系(HepG2)和乳腺上皮细胞系(PMC42),测量了从纯化的人白蛋白和α2-巨球蛋白摄取铜的动力学以及抑制剂的影响。在生理浓度(3 - 6 μM)下,两种细胞类型都能独立地从这些蛋白质中摄取铜,摄取速率彼此相似,且与从铜 - 二组氨酸或铜 - 次氮基三乙酸(NTA)摄取铜的速率相似。从α2-巨球蛋白摄取铜表明,每种细胞类型中都存在一个单一的可饱和系统,但动力学不同,并且在HepG2细胞中,Ag(I)可抑制65 - 80%的摄取,而在PMC42细胞中则无此现象。铜 - 白蛋白的摄取动力学更为复杂,并且也因细胞类型而异(铜 - 组氨酸和NTA的情况也是如此),Ag(I)对其摄取几乎没有抑制作用。高浓度的Fe(II)(100 - 500 μM)在两种细胞类型中均抑制从白蛋白摄取铜20 - 30%,抑制从α2-巨球蛋白摄取铜0 - 30%,而Mn(II)或Zn(II)对后者无抑制作用。我们得出结论,主要负责血浆可交换铜池的蛋白质通过几种不同机制将金属有效地输送到哺乳动物细胞。α2-巨球蛋白主要将其输送到肝细胞中的铜转运蛋白1,但不输送到乳腺上皮细胞中,从这些蛋白质摄取铜的其他尚未确定的铜转运蛋白或系统仍有待鉴定。