Morrell Austin, Tallino Savannah, Yu Lei, Burkhead Jason L
Department of Biological Sciences Anchorage, University of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, Alaska.
Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
IUBMB Life. 2017 Apr;69(4):263-270. doi: 10.1002/iub.1613. Epub 2017 Mar 8.
The essential transition metal copper is important in lipid metabolism, redox balance, iron mobilization, and many other critical processes in eukaryotic organisms. Genetic diseases where copper homeostasis is disrupted, including Menkes disease and Wilson disease, indicate the importance of copper balance to human health. The severe consequences of insufficient copper supply are illustrated by Menkes disease, caused by mutation in the X-linked ATP7A gene encoding a protein that transports copper from intestinal epithelia into the bloodstream and across the blood-brain barrier. Inadequate copper supply to the body due to poor diet quality or malabsorption can disrupt several molecular level pathways and processes. Though much of the copper distribution machinery has been described and consequences of disrupted copper handling have been characterized in human disease as well as animal models, physiological consequences of sub-optimal copper due to poor nutrition or malabsorption have not been extensively studied. Recent work indicates that insufficient copper may be important in a number of common diseases including obesity, ischemic heart disease, and metabolic syndrome. Specifically, marginal copper deficiency (CuD) has been reported as a potential etiologic factor in diseases characterized by disrupted lipid metabolism such as non-alcoholic fatty-liver disease (NAFLD). In this review, we discuss the available data suggesting that a significant portion of the North American population may consume insufficient copper, the potential mechanisms by which CuD may promote lipid biosynthesis, and the interaction between CuD and dietary fructose in the etiology of NAFLD. © 2016 IUBMB Life, 69(4):263-270, 2017.
必需过渡金属铜在脂质代谢、氧化还原平衡、铁转运以及真核生物的许多其他关键过程中都很重要。铜稳态被破坏的遗传疾病,包括门克斯病和威尔逊病,表明铜平衡对人类健康的重要性。门克斯病说明了铜供应不足的严重后果,该病由X连锁ATP7A基因突变引起,该基因编码一种将铜从肠上皮转运到血液并穿过血脑屏障的蛋白质。由于饮食质量差或吸收不良导致身体铜供应不足,会扰乱几个分子水平的途径和过程。尽管已经描述了许多铜分布机制,并且在人类疾病以及动物模型中已经明确了铜处理紊乱的后果,但由于营养不良或吸收不良导致的次优铜水平的生理后果尚未得到广泛研究。最近的研究表明,铜不足可能在包括肥胖症、缺血性心脏病和代谢综合征在内的许多常见疾病中起重要作用。具体而言,边缘性铜缺乏(CuD)已被报道为以脂质代谢紊乱为特征的疾病(如非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD))的潜在病因。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了现有数据,这些数据表明北美很大一部分人口可能摄入铜不足,CuD可能促进脂质生物合成的潜在机制,以及CuD与饮食果糖在NAFLD病因中的相互作用。© 2016国际生物化学与分子生物学联盟生命科学,69(4):263 - 270,2017。