2003
DOI: 10.1016/s0162-0134(03)00291-5
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Kinetic identification of a mitochondrial zinc uptake transport process in prostate cells

Abstract: Prostate cells accumulate high cellular and mitochondrial concentrations of zinc, generally 3-10-fold higher than other mammalian cells. However, the mechanism of mitochondrial import and accumulation of zinc from cytosolic sources of zinc has not been established for these cells or for any mammalian cells. Since the cytosolic concentration of free Zn(2+) ions is negligible (estimates vary from 10(-9) to 10(-15) M), we postulated that loosely bound zinc-ligand complexes (Zn-Ligands) serve as zinc donor sources… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…This reveals that the inhibitory effect involves a direct intermolecular transfer of zinc from the donor ZnLigand to the recipient electron transport component. A similar mechanism is involved in the import of zinc into mitochondria by a putative inner membrane zinc uptake transporter that has an apparent log K f ~ 11 (Guan et al, 2003). Consistent with this mechanism, Halthout et al (2001) reported that the direct intermolecular transfer of zinc from donor ligand to recipient peptide does not involve an intermediary free Zn + + ion step, and is dependent upon the relative zincbinding affinities of the interacting components.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This reveals that the inhibitory effect involves a direct intermolecular transfer of zinc from the donor ZnLigand to the recipient electron transport component. A similar mechanism is involved in the import of zinc into mitochondria by a putative inner membrane zinc uptake transporter that has an apparent log K f ~ 11 (Guan et al, 2003). Consistent with this mechanism, Halthout et al (2001) reported that the direct intermolecular transfer of zinc from donor ligand to recipient peptide does not involve an intermediary free Zn + + ion step, and is dependent upon the relative zincbinding affinities of the interacting components.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…The ZnLigand solutions contained 20 μM ZnCl 2 and 60 μM ligand. The basis for these concentrations and characterizations of zinc ligand forms and their reactivity is presented in Guan et al (2003). The log K f values (formation constants) are ZnCitrate ~ 5, ZnCysteine ~ 10, ZnEDTA ~ 16.…”
Section: Preparation Of Zinc Solutionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore the cytosolic source of mitochondrial zinc is derived from mobile reactive ZnLigands that are 10 kDa or less and are capable of permeating the outer mitochondrial membrane pores. These low molecular weight ZnLigands (such as ZnMetallothionein, ZnCitrate, ZnAspartate, ZnHistidine) constitute the source of "mobile reactive zinc" for transport into the mitochondria [14][15][16][17][18]. This pool of zinc is probably in the low uM range.…”
Section: Mitochondrial Zinc Transportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This pool of zinc is probably in the low uM range. A mitochondrial zinc uptake transporter activity that is capable of importing zinc from these cytosolic ZnLigands has been kinetically identified in prostate and liver mitochondria [17,18]. The putative transporter effectively transports zinc from ZnLigands that have a binding affinity lower than about log Kf=12.…”
Section: Mitochondrial Zinc Transportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, ZnMT (logKf~10) is an effective donor for zinc uptake by mitochondria, and this might be an important zinc chaperone in cells that have high expression of MT and low levels of other mobile reactive ZnLigands such as liver cells (Costello et al, 2004b). This zinc uptake process involves a kinetically-identified zinc uptake transporter that is associated with the inner mitochondrial membrane (Guan et al, 2003). The mechanism involves the direct intermolecular exchange (as described above) of zinc from the donor ZnLigand to the recipient putative uptake transporter protein which has an apparent logKf~10-11.…”
Section: Zinc Trafficking Into Mitochondriamentioning
confidence: 99%