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Defective localization of the Wilson disease protein (ATP7B) in the mammary gland of the toxic milk mouse and the effects of copper supplementation

journal contribution
posted on 2000-12-01, 00:00 authored by Agnes MichalczykAgnes Michalczyk, J Rieger, K J Allen, J F Mercer, Leigh AcklandLeigh Ackland
Toxic milk (tx) is a copper disorder of mice that causes a hepatic accumulation of copper similar to that seen in patients with Wilson disease. Both disorders are caused by a defect in the ATP7B copper-transporting ATPase. A feature of the tx phenotype is the production of copper-deficient milk by lactating dams homozygous for the tx mutation; the milk is lethal to the pups. It has not been determined whether the production of copper-deficient milk is a direct consequence of impaired expression of ATP7B protein in the mammary gland. With the use of immunohistochemistry, our study demonstrated that the ATP7B protein was mislocalized in the lactating tx mouse mammary gland, which would explain the inability of the tx mouse to secrete normal amounts of copper in milk. Confocal microscopy analysis showed that, in the lactating tx mammary gland, ATP7B was predominantly perinuclear in comparison with the diffuse, cytoplasmic localization of ATP7B in the lactating normal mammary gland. Lactating tx mice showed impaired delivery of copper from the mammary gland to the milk and this was not ameliorated by dietary copper supplementation. In contrast, the normal mouse mammary gland responded to increased dietary copper by increasing the amount of copper in milk. A change in the distribution of the ATP7B protein from perinuclear in the non-lactating gland to a diffuse, cytoplasmic localization in the lactating gland of the normal (DL) mouse suggests that the relocalization of APT7B is a physiological process that accompanies lactation. We conclude that the impaired copper transport from the mammary gland into milk in lactating tx mice is related to the mislocalization of ATP7B.

History

Journal

Biochemical journal

Volume

352

Issue

2

Pagination

565 - 571

Publisher

Portland Press

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0264-6021

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2000, Biochemical Society