The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2021 Jul;115:19-26. doi: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2020.12.003. Epub 2021 Jan 7.
The transition metal Cu is an essential micronutrient that serves as a co-factor for numerous enzymes involved in redox and oxygen chemistry. However, Cu is also a potentially toxic metal, especially to unicellular microbes that are in direct contact with their environment. Since 400 BCE, Cu toxicity has been leveraged for its antimicrobial properties and even today, Cu based materials are being explored as effective antimicrobials against human pathogens spanning bacteria, fungi, and viruses, including the SARS-CoV-2 agent of the 2019-2020 pandemic. Given that Cu has the double-edged property of being both highly toxic and an essential micronutrient, it plays an active and complicated role at the host-pathogen interface. Humans have evolved methods of incorporating Cu into innate and adaptive immune processes and both sides of the penny (Cu toxicity and Cu as a nutrient) are employed. Here we review the evolution of Cu in biology and its multi-faceted roles in infectious disease, from the viewpoints of the microbial pathogens as well as the animal hosts they infect.
过渡金属 Cu 是一种必需的微量元素,它作为许多涉及氧化还原和氧化学的酶的辅助因子。然而,Cu 也是一种潜在的有毒金属,特别是对于与环境直接接触的单细胞微生物而言。自公元前 400 年以来,Cu 的毒性已被用于其抗菌特性,即使在今天,基于 Cu 的材料也被探索为针对细菌、真菌和病毒等人类病原体的有效抗菌剂,包括 2019-2020 年大流行的 SARS-CoV-2 病原体。鉴于 Cu 具有高度毒性和必需微量元素的双重特性,它在宿主-病原体界面上发挥着积极而复杂的作用。人类已经进化出将 Cu 纳入先天和适应性免疫过程的方法,并且都利用了 Cu 的两面性(Cu 的毒性和 Cu 作为营养物)。在这里,我们从感染它们的微生物病原体以及动物宿主的角度,综述了生物学中 Cu 的进化及其在传染病中的多方面作用。