Issue 10, 2017

Subcellular compartmentalisation of copper, iron, manganese, and zinc in the Parkinson's disease brain

Abstract

Elevated iron and decreased copper levels are cardinal features of the degenerating substantia nigra pars compacta in the Parkinson's disease brain. Both of these redox-active metals, and fellow transition metals manganese and zinc, are found at high concentrations within the midbrain and participate in a range of unique biological reactions. We examined the total metal content and cellular compartmentalisation of manganese, iron, copper and zinc in the degenerating substantia nigra, disease-affected but non-degenerating fusiform gyrus, and unaffected occipital cortex in the post mortem Parkinson's disease brain compared with age-matched controls. An expected increase in iron and a decrease in copper concentration was isolated to the soluble cellular fraction, encompassing both interstitial and cytosolic metals and metal-binding proteins, rather than the membrane-associated or insoluble fractions. Manganese and zinc levels did not differ between experimental groups. Altered Fe and Cu levels were unrelated to Braak pathological staging in our cases of late-stage (Braak stage V and VI) disease. The data supports our hypothesis that regional alterations in Fe and Cu, and in proteins that utilise these metals, contribute to the regional selectively of neuronal vulnerability in this disorder.

Graphical abstract: Subcellular compartmentalisation of copper, iron, manganese, and zinc in the Parkinson's disease brain

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Aug 2017
Accepted
13 Sep 2017
First published
13 Sep 2017
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Metallomics, 2017,9, 1447-1455

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