4.5 Article

Human copper transporter 2 is localized in late endosomes and lysosomes and facilitates cellular copper uptake

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 407, Issue -, Pages 49-59

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20070705

Keywords

copper biosensor; copper transporter 1 (Ctr1); copper transporter 2 (Ctr2); copper uptake; metallothionein; zinc

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High-affinity cellular copper uptake is mediated by the CTR (copper transporter) 1 family of proteins. The highly homologous hCTR (human CTR) 2 protein has been identified, but its function in copper uptake is currently unknown. To characterize the role of hCTR2 in copper homoeostasis, epitope-tagged hCTR2 was transiently expressed in different cell lines. hCTR2-vsvG (vesicular-stomatitis-virus glycoprotein) predominantly migrated as a 17 kDa protein after imunoblot analysis, consistent with its predicted molecular mass. Chemical cross-linking resulted in the detection of higher-molecular-mass complexes containing hCTR2vsvG. Furthermore, hCTR2-vsvG was co-immunoprecipitated with hCTR2-FLAG, suggesting that hCTR2 can form multimers, like hCTR1. Transiently transfected hCTR2-eGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein) was localized exclusively to late endosomes and lysosomes, and was not detected at the plasma membrane. To functionally address the role of hCTR2 in copper metabolism, a novel transcription-based copper sensor was developed. This MRE (metal-responsive element)-luciferase reporter contained four MREs from the mouse metallothionein IA promoter upstream of the firefly luciferase open reading frame. Thus the MRE-luciferase reporter measured bioavailable cytosolic copper. Expression of hCTRI resulted in strong activation of the reporter, with maximal induction at 1 mu M CuCl2, consistent with the Km of hCTR1. Interestingly, expression of hCTR2 significantly induced MRE-luciferase reporter activation in a copper-dependent manner at 40 and 100 mu M CuCl2. Taken together, these results identify hCTR2 as an oligomeric membrane protein localized in lysosomes, which stimulates copper delivery to the cytosol of human cells at relatively high copper concentrations. This work suggests a role for endosomal and lysosomal copper pools in the maintenance of cellular copper homoeostasis.

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