Maryon EB, Molloy SA, Kaplan JH. Cellular glutathione plays a key role in copper uptake mediated by human copper transporter 1.
The major human copper uptake protein, hCTR1, has 190 amino acids and a predicted mass of 21 kDa. hCTR1 antibodies recognize multiple bands in SDS-PAGE centered at 35 kDa. Part of this increased mass is due to N-linked glycosylation at Asn-15. We show that in mammalian cells the N15Q mutant protein trafficked to the plasma membrane and mediated copper uptake at 75% of the rate of wild-type hCTR1. We demonstrate that the extracellular amino terminus of hCTR1 also contains O-linked polysaccharides. Glycosidase treatment that removed O-linked sugars reduced the apparent mass of hCTR1 or N15Q mutant protein by 1-2 kDa. Expression of amino-terminal truncations and alanine substitution mutants of hCTR1 in HEK293 and MDCK cells localized the site of O-linked glycosylation to Thr-27. Expression of alanine substitutions at Thr-27 resulted in proteolytic cleavage of hCTR1 on the carboxyl side of the T27A mutations. This cleavage produced a 17-kDa polypeptide missing approximately the first 30 amino acids of hCTR1. Expression of wild-type hCTR1 in mutant Chinese hamster ovary cells that were unable to initiate O-glycosylation also resulted in hCTR1 cleavage to produce the 17-kDa polypeptide. The 17-kDa hCTR1 polypeptide was located in the plasma membrane and mediated copper uptake at about 50% that of the rate of wildtype hCTR1. Thus, O-linked glycosylation at Thr-27 is necessary to prevent proteolytic cleavage that removes half of the extracellular amino terminus of hCTR1 and significantly impairs transport activity of the remaining polypeptide.
Copper is an essential co-factor in many important physiological processes, but at elevated levels it is toxic to cells. Thus at both the organism and cellular level mechanisms have evolved to finely tune copper homeostasis. The protein responsible for copper entry from the circulation in most human cells is hCTR1, a small protein (190 amino acid residues) that functions as a trimer in the plasma membrane. In the present work we employ cell surface biotinylation and isotopic copper uptake studies of overexpressed hCTR1 in HEK293 cells to examine the acute (minutes) response of hCTR1 to changes in extracellular copper. We show that within 10 min of exposure to copper at 2.5 M or higher, plasma membrane hCTR1 levels are reduced (by ϳ40%), with a concomitant reduction in copper uptake rates. We are unable to detect any degradation of internalized hCTR1 in the presence of cycloheximide after up to 2 h of exposure to 0 -100 M copper. Using a reversible biotinylation assay, we quantified internalized hCTR1, which increased upon the addition of copper and corresponded to the hCTR1 lost from the surface. In addition, when extracellular copper is then removed, internalized hCTR1 is promptly (within 30 min) recycled to the plasma membrane. We have shown that in the absence of added extracellular copper, there is a small but detectable amount of internalized hCTR1 that is increased in the presence of copper. Similar studies on endogenous hCTR1 show a cell-specific response to elevated extracellular copper. Copper-dependent internalization and recycling of hCTR1 provides an acute and reversible mechanism for the regulation of cellular copper entry.
Body copper homeostasis is regulated by the liver, which removes excess copper via bile. In Wilson's disease (WD), this function is disrupted due to inactivation of the copper transporter ATP7B resulting in hepatic copper overload. High urinary copper is a diagnostic feature of WD linked to liver malfunction; the mechanism behind urinary copper elevation is not fully understood. Using Positron Emission Tomography-Computed Tomography (PET-CT) imaging of live Atp7b−/− mice at different stages of disease, a longitudinal metal analysis, and characterization of copper-binding molecules, we show that urinary copper elevation is a specific regulatory process mediated by distinct molecules. PET-CT and atomic absorption spectroscopy directly demonstrate an age-dependent decrease in the capacity of Atp7b−/− livers to accumulate copper, concomitant with an increase in urinary copper. This reciprocal relationship is specific for copper, indicating that cell necrosis is not the primary cause for the initial phase of metal elevation in the urine. Instead, the urinary copper increase is associated with the down-regulation of the copper-transporter Ctr1 in the liver and appearance of a 2 kDa Small Copper Carrier, SCC, in the urine. SCC is also elevated in the urine of the liver-specific Ctr1 −/− knockouts, which have normal ATP7B function, suggesting that SCC is a normal metabolite carrying copper in the serum. In agreement with this hypothesis, partially purified SCC-Cu competes with free copper for uptake by Ctr1. Thus, hepatic down-regulation of Ctr1 allows switching to an SCC-mediated removal of copper via kidney when liver function is impaired. These results demonstrate that the body regulates copper export through more than one mechanism; better understanding of urinary copper excretion may contribute to an improved diagnosis and monitoring of WD.
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