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Exploration of the Potential Role for Aβ in Delivery of Extracellular Copper to Ctr1.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Stefaniak, E; Pushie, MJ; Vaerewyck, C; Corcelli, D; Griggs, C; Lewis, W; Kelley, E; Maloney, N; Sendzik, M; Bal, W; Haas, KL
Published in: Inorganic chemistry
December 2020

Amyloid beta (Aβ) peptides are notorious for their involvement in Alzheimer's disease (AD), by virtue of their propensity to aggregate to form oligomers, fibrils, and eventually plaques in the brain. Nevertheless, they appear to be essential for correct neurophysiology on the synaptic level and may have additional functions including antimicrobial activity, sealing the blood-brain barrier, promotion of recovery from brain injury, and even tumor suppression. Aβ peptides are also avid copper chelators, and coincidentally copper is significantly dysregulated in the AD brain. Copper (Cu) is released in significant amounts during calcium signaling at the synaptic membrane. Aβ peptides may have a role in maintaining synaptic Cu homeostasis, including as a scavenger for redox-active Cu and as a chaperone for clearing Cu from the synaptic cleft. Here, we employed the Aβ1-16 and Aβ4-16 peptides as well-established non-aggregating models of major Aβ species in healthy and AD brains, and the Ctr1-14 peptide as a model for the extracellular domain of the human cellular copper transporter protein (Ctr1). With these model peptides and a number of spectroscopic techniques, we investigated whether the Cu complexes of Aβ peptides could provide Ctr1 with either Cu(II) or Cu(I). We found that Aβ1-16 fully and rapidly delivered Cu(II) to Ctr1-14 along the affinity gradient. Such delivery was only partial for the Aβ4-16/Ctr1-14 pair, in agreement with the higher complex stability for the former peptide. Moreover, the reaction was very slow and took ca. 40 h to reach equilibrium under the given experimental conditions. In either case of Cu(II) exchange, no intermediate (ternary) species were present in detectable amounts. In contrast, both Aβ species released Cu(I) to Ctr1-14 rapidly and in a quantitative fashion, but ternary intermediate species were detected in the analysis of XAS data. The results presented here are the first direct evidence of a Cu(I) and Cu(II) transfer between the human Ctr1 and Aβ model peptides. These results are discussed in terms of the fundamental difference between the peptides' Cu(II) complexes (pleiotropic ensemble of open structures of Aβ1-16 vs the rigid closed-ring system of amino-terminal Cu/Ni binding Aβ4-16) and the similarity of their Cu(I) complexes (both anchored at the tandem His13/His14, bis-His motif). These results indicate that Cu(I) may be more feasible than Cu(II) as the cargo for copper clearance from the synaptic cleft by Aβ peptides and its delivery to Ctr1. The arguments in favor of Cu(I) include the fact that cellular Cu export and uptake proteins (ATPase7A/B and Ctr1, respectively) specifically transport Cu(I), the abundance of extracellular ascorbate reducing agent in the brain, and evidence of a potential associative (hand-off) mechanism of Cu(I) transfer that may mirror the mechanisms of intracellular Cu chaperone proteins.

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Published In

Inorganic chemistry

DOI

EISSN

1520-510X

ISSN

0020-1669

Publication Date

December 2020

Volume

59

Issue

23

Start / End Page

16952 / 16966

Related Subject Headings

  • Spectrometry, Fluorescence
  • Inorganic & Nuclear Chemistry
  • Humans
  • Copper Transporter 1
  • Copper
  • Amyloid beta-Peptides
  • 3403 Macromolecular and materials chemistry
  • 3402 Inorganic chemistry
  • 0399 Other Chemical Sciences
  • 0306 Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural)
 

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Stefaniak, E., Pushie, M. J., Vaerewyck, C., Corcelli, D., Griggs, C., Lewis, W., … Haas, K. L. (2020). Exploration of the Potential Role for Aβ in Delivery of Extracellular Copper to Ctr1. Inorganic Chemistry, 59(23), 16952–16966. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c02100
Stefaniak, Ewelina, M Jake Pushie, Catherine Vaerewyck, David Corcelli, Chloe Griggs, Whitney Lewis, Emma Kelley, et al. “Exploration of the Potential Role for Aβ in Delivery of Extracellular Copper to Ctr1.Inorganic Chemistry 59, no. 23 (December 2020): 16952–66. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c02100.
Stefaniak E, Pushie MJ, Vaerewyck C, Corcelli D, Griggs C, Lewis W, et al. Exploration of the Potential Role for Aβ in Delivery of Extracellular Copper to Ctr1. Inorganic chemistry. 2020 Dec;59(23):16952–66.
Stefaniak, Ewelina, et al. “Exploration of the Potential Role for Aβ in Delivery of Extracellular Copper to Ctr1.Inorganic Chemistry, vol. 59, no. 23, Dec. 2020, pp. 16952–66. Epmc, doi:10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c02100.
Stefaniak E, Pushie MJ, Vaerewyck C, Corcelli D, Griggs C, Lewis W, Kelley E, Maloney N, Sendzik M, Bal W, Haas KL. Exploration of the Potential Role for Aβ in Delivery of Extracellular Copper to Ctr1. Inorganic chemistry. 2020 Dec;59(23):16952–16966.
Journal cover image

Published In

Inorganic chemistry

DOI

EISSN

1520-510X

ISSN

0020-1669

Publication Date

December 2020

Volume

59

Issue

23

Start / End Page

16952 / 16966

Related Subject Headings

  • Spectrometry, Fluorescence
  • Inorganic & Nuclear Chemistry
  • Humans
  • Copper Transporter 1
  • Copper
  • Amyloid beta-Peptides
  • 3403 Macromolecular and materials chemistry
  • 3402 Inorganic chemistry
  • 0399 Other Chemical Sciences
  • 0306 Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural)