69 research outputs found

    Disturbed Copper Bioavailability in Alzheimer's Disease

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    Recent data from in vitro, animal, and human studies have shed new light on the positive roles of copper in many aspects of AD. Copper promotes the non-amyloidogenic processing of APP and thereby lowers the Aβ production in cell culture systems, and it increases lifetime and decreases soluble amyloid production in APP transgenic mice. In a clinical trial with Alzheimer patients, the decline of Aβ levels in CSF, which is a diagnostic marker, is diminished in the verum group (8 mg copper/day), indicating a beneficial effect of the copper treatment. These observations are in line with the benefit of treatment with compounds aimed at normalizing metal levels in the brain, such as PBT2. The data reviewed here demonstrate that there is an apparent disturbance in metal homeostasis in AD. More research is urgently needed to understand how this disturbance can be addressed therapeutically

    Toxicity of Alzheimer's disease-associated Aβ peptide is ameliorated in a Drosophila model by tight control of zinc and copper availability

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    Amyloid plaques consisting of aggregated Aβ peptide are a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. Among the different forms of Aβ, the one of 42aa length (Aβ42) is most aggregation-prone and also the most neurotoxic. We find that eye-specific expression of human Aβ42 in Drosophila results in a degeneration of eye structures that progresses with age. Dietary supplements of zinc or copper ions exacerbate eye damage. Positive effects are seen with zinc/copper chelators, or with elevated expression of MTF-1, a transcription factor with a key role in metal homeostasis and detoxification, or with human or fly transgenes encoding metallothioneins, metal scavenger proteins. These results show that a tight control of zinc and copper availability can minimize cellular damage associated with Aβ42 expressio

    Interaction kinetics of the copper-responsive CopY repressor with the cop promoter of Enterococcus hirae

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    Abstract : In Enterococcus hirae, copper homeostasis is controlled by the cop operon, which encodes the copper-responsive repressor CopY, the copper chaperone CopZ, and two copper ATPases, CopA and CopB. The four genes are under control of CopY, which is a homodimeric zinc protein, [Zn(II)CopY]2. It acts as a copper-responsive repressor: when media copper is raised, CopY is released from the DNA, allowing transcription to proceed. This involves the conversion of [Zn(II)CopY]2 to [Cu(I)2CopY]2, which is no longer able to bind to the promoter. Binding analysis of [Zn(II)CopY]2 to orthologous promoters and to control DNA by surface plasmon resonance analysis defined the consensus sequence TACAnnTGTA as the repressor binding element, or "cop box”, of Gram-positive bacteria. Association and dissociation rates for the CopY-DNA interaction in the absence and presence of added copper were determined. The dissociation rate of [Zn(II)CopY]2 from the promoter was 7.3×10-6s-1 and was increased to 5×10-5s-1 in the presence of copper. This copper-induced change may be the underlying mechanism of copper induction. Induction of the cop operon was also assessed in vivo with a biosensor containing a lux reporter system under the control of the E. hirae cop promoter. Half-maximal induction of this biosensor was observed at 5μM media copper, which delineates the ambient copper concentration to which the cop operon responds in viv

    Understanding the interaction of polyelectrolyte architectures with proteins and biosystems

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    Polyelectrolytes such as e.g. DNA or heparin are long linear or branched macromolecules onto which charges are appended. The counterions neutralizing these charges may dissociate in water and will largely determine the interaction of such polyelectrolytes with biomolecules and in particular with proteins. Here we review studies on the interaction of proteins with polyelectrolytes and how this knowledge can be used for medical applications. Counterion release was identified as the main driving force for the binding of proteins to polyelectrolytes: Patches of positive charge become multivalent counterions of the polyelectrolyte which leads to the release of counterions of the polyelectrolyte and a concomitant increase of entropy. We show this by surveying investigations done on the interaction of proteins with natural and synthetic polyelectrolytes. Special emphasis is laid on sulfated dendritic polyglycerols (dPGS). The entire overview demonstrates that we are moving on to a better understanding of charge‐charge interaction in system of biological relevance. Hence, research along these lines will aid and promote the design of synthetic polyelectrolytes for medical applications

    APP dimer formation is initiated in the endoplasmic reticulum and differs between APP isoforms

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    The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is part of a larger gene family, which has been found to form homo- or heterotypic complexes with its homologues, whereby the exact molecular mechanism and origin of dimer formation remains elusive. In order to assess the cellular location of dimerization, we have generated a cell culture model system in CHO-K1 cells, stably expressing human APP, harboring dilysine-based organelle sorting motifs [KKAA-endoplasmic reticulum (ER); KKFF-Golgi], accomplishing retention within early secretory compartments. We show that APP exists as disulfide-bonded dimers upon ER retention after it was isolated from cells, and analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-reducing conditions. In contrast, strong denaturing and reducing conditions, or deletion of the E1 domain, resulted in the disappearance of those dimers. Thus we provide first evidence that a fraction of APP can associate via intermolecular disulfide bonds, likely generated between cysteines located in the extracellular E1 domain. We particularly visualize APP dimerization itself and identified the ER as subcellular compartment of its origin using biochemical or split GFP approaches. Interestingly, we also found that minor amounts of SDS-resistant APP dimers were located to the cell surface, revealing that once generated in the oxidative environment of the ER, dimers remained stably associated during transport. In addition, we show that APP isoforms encompassing the Kunitz-type protease inhibitor (KPI) domain exhibit a strongly reduced ability to form cis-directed dimers in the ER, whereas trans-mediated cell aggregation of Drosophila Schneider S2-cells was isoform independent. Thus, suggesting that steric properties of KPI-APP might be the cause for weaker cis-interaction in the ER, compared to APP695. Finally, we provide evidence that APP/APLP1 heterointeractions are likewise initiated in the ER

    Анализ осветительной установки центра спортивной подготовки "Заря"

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    In the work provided an analysis of the lighting system UIA Sports Training Centre "Dawn", Novosibirsk and calculation of payback lighting installation when replacing an existing system on led light sources

    Transcriptome response to heavy metal stress in Drosophila reveals a new zinc transporter that confers resistance to zinc

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    All organisms are confronted with external variations in trace element abundance. To elucidate the mechanisms that maintain metal homeostasis and protect against heavy metal stress, we have determined the transcriptome responses in Drosophila to sublethal doses of cadmium, zinc, copper, as well as to copper depletion. Furthermore, we analyzed the transcriptome of a metal-responsive transcription factor (MTF-1) null mutant. The gene family encoding metallothioneins, and the ABC transporter CG10505 that encodes a homolog of ‘yeast cadmium factor’ were induced by all three metals. Zinc and cadmium responses have similar features: genes upregulated by both metals include those for glutathione S-transferases GstD2 and GstD5, and for zinc transporter-like proteins designated ZnT35C and ZnT63C. Several of the metal-induced genes that emerged in our study are regulated by the transcription factor MTF-1. mRNA studies in MTF-1 overexpressing or null mutant flies and in silico search for metal response elements (binding sites for MTF-1) confirmed novel MTF-1 regulated genes such as ferritins, the ABC transporter CG10505 and the zinc transporter ZnT35C. The latter was analyzed in most detail; biochemical and genetic approaches, including targeted mutation, indicate that ZnT35C is involved in cellular and organismal zinc efflux and plays a major role in zinc detoxification
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