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Title

Low concentrations of copper in drinking water increase AP-1 binding in the brain.

Authors

Lung, Shyang; Li, Huihui; Bondy, Stephen C.; Campbell, Arezoo

Abstract

Copper (Cu) in trace amounts is essential for biological organisms. However, dysregulation of the redox-active metal has been implicated in different neurological disorders such as Wilson’s, Menkes’, Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s diseases. Since many households use Cu tubing in the plumbing system, and corrosion causes the metal to leach into the drinking water, there may be adverse effects on the central nervous system connected with low-level chronic exposure. The present study demonstrates that treatment with a biologically relevant concentration of Cu for 3 months significantly increases activation of the redox-modulated transcription factor AP-1 in mouse brains. This was independent of an upstream kinase indicated in AP-1 activation. Another redox-active transcription factor, NF-κB, was not significantly modified by the Cu exposure. These results indicate that the effect of Cu on AP-1 is unique and may involve direct modulation of DNA binding.

Subjects

COPPER content of drinking water; TRANSCRIPTION factor AP-1; NEUROLOGICAL disorders; DNA-binding proteins; OXIDATIVE stress; LABORATORY mice

Publication

Toxicology & Industrial Health, 2015, Vol 31, Issue 12, p1178

ISSN

0748-2337

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1177/0748233713491805

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