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      Trace elements in human physiology and pathology. Copper

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      Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
      Elsevier BV

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          Molecular biology of prion diseases.

          Prions cause transmissible and genetic neurodegenerative diseases, including scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy of animals and Creutzfeldt-Jakob and Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker diseases of humans. Infectious prion particles are composed largely, if not entirely, of an abnormal isoform of the prion protein, which is encoded by a chromosomal gene. A posttranslational process, as yet unidentified, converts the cellular prion protein into an abnormal isoform. Scrapie incubation times, neuropathology, and prion synthesis in transgenic mice are controlled by the prion protein gene. Point mutations in the prion protein genes of animals and humans are genetically linked to development of neuro-degeneration. Transgenic mice expressing mutant prion proteins spontaneously develop neurologic dysfunction and spongiform neuropathology. Understanding prion diseases may advance investigations of other neurodegenerative disorders and of the processes by which neurons differentiate, function for decades, and then grow senescent.
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            The Wilson disease gene is a putative copper transporting P-type ATPase similar to the Menkes gene.

            Wilson disease (WD) is an autosomal recessive disorder of copper transport, resulting in copper accumulation and toxicity to the liver and brain. The gene (WD) has been mapped to chromosome 13 q14.3. On yeast artificial chromosomes from this region we have identified a sequence, similar to that coding for the proposed copper binding regions of the putative ATPase gene (MNK) defective in Menkes disease. We show that this sequence forms part of a P-type ATPase gene (referred to here as Wc1) that is very similar to MNK, with six putative metal binding regions similar to those found in prokaryotic heavy metal transporters. The gene, expressed in liver and kidney, lies within a 300 kb region likely to include the WD locus. Two WD patients were found to be homozygous for a seven base deletion within the coding region of Wc1. Wc1 is proposed as the gene for WD.
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              Oxygen toxicity, oxygen radicals, transition metals and disease.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
                Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
                Elsevier BV
                07533322
                November 2003
                November 2003
                : 57
                : 9
                : 386-398
                Article
                10.1016/S0753-3322(03)00012-X
                14652164
                0c64cac2-1ed9-4d5f-b9cb-10d0f7033bfe
                © 2003

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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