Copper and lactational hormones influence the CTR1 copper transporter in PMC42-LA mammary epithelial cell culture models.

J Nutr Biochem

Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Burwood, Victoria 3121, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: April 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Adequate copper levels in milk are essential for newborn development, but the mechanisms behind copper regulation in milk remain unclear.
  • The study examined CTR1, a copper uptake protein, in different states of mammary epithelial cells (resting, lactating, and suckled) and found that CTR1 expression is inversely related to extracellular copper concentration.
  • As mammary cells differentiate, they require more copper, and CTR1 expression is primarily regulated post-translationally, indicating its role in copper uptake for milk secretion.

Article Abstract

Adequate amounts of copper in milk are critical for normal neonatal development, however the mechanisms regulating copper supply to milk have not been clearly defined. PMC42-LA cell cultures representative of resting, lactating and suckled mammary epithelia were used to investigate the regulation of the copper uptake protein, CTR1. Both the degree of mammary epithelial differentiation (functionality) and extracellular copper concentration greatly impacted upon CTR1 expression and its plasma membrane association. In all three models (resting, lactating and suckling) there was an inverse correlation between extracellular copper concentration and the level of CTR1. Cell surface biotinylation studies demonstrated that as extracellular copper concentration increased membrane associated CTR1 was reduced. There was a significant increase in CTR1 expression (total and membrane associated) in the suckled gland model in comparison to the resting gland model, across all copper concentrations investigated (0-50 μM). Regulation of CTR1 expression was entirely post-translational, as quantitative real-time PCR analyses showed no change to CTR1 mRNA between all models and culture conditions. X-ray fluorescence microscopy on the differentiated PMC42-LA models revealed that organoid structures distinctively accumulated copper. Furthermore, as PMC42-LA cell cultures became progressively more specialised, successively more copper accumulated in organoids (resting

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jnutbio.2013.11.011DOI Listing

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