Abstract

Acquisition of the trace element copper (Cu) is critical to drive essential eukaryotic processes such as oxidative phosphorylation, iron mobilization, peptide hormone biogenesis, and connective tissue maturation. The Ctr1/Ctr3 family of Cu importers, first discovered in fungi and conserved in mammals, are critical for Cu+ movement across the plasma membrane or mobilization from endosomal compartments. Whereas ablation of Ctr1 in mammals is embryonic lethal, and Ctr1 is critical for dietary Cu absorption, cardiac function, and systemic iron distribution, little is known about the intrinsic contribution of Ctr1 for Cu+ permeation through membranes or its mechanism of action. Here, we identify three members of a Cu+ importer family from the thermophilic fungus Chaetomium thermophilum: Ctr3a and Ctr3b, which function on the plasma membrane, and Ctr2, which likely functions in endosomal Cu mobilization. All three proteins drive Cu and isoelectronic silver (Ag) uptake in cells devoid of Cu+ importers. Transport activity depends on signature amino acid motifs that are conserved and essential for all Ctr1/3 transporters. Ctr3a is stable and amenable to purification and was incorporated into liposomes to reconstitute an in vitro Ag+ transport assay characterized by stopped-flow spectroscopy. Ctr3a has intrinsic high-affinity metal ion transport activity that closely reflects values determined in vivo, with slow turnover kinetics. Given structural models for mammalian Ctr1, Ctr3a likely functions as a low-efficiency Cu+ ion channel. The Ctr1/Ctr3 family may be tuned to import essential yet potentially toxic Cu+ ions at a slow rate to meet cellular needs, while minimizing labile intracellular Cu+ pools.

Highlights

  • Acquisition of the trace element copper (Cu) is critical to drive essential eukaryotic processes such as oxidative phosphorylation, iron mobilization, peptide hormone biogenesis, and connective tissue maturation

  • Calculation of half-maximal transport (K1⁄2) and ion turnover rate for C. thermophilum Ctr3a demonstrates that this Ctr1/Ctr3 family transports with a high affinity but a surprisingly slow intrinsic rate, potentially to mitigate the toxicity associated with rapid Cuϩ influx

  • The genome of a thermophilic fungus, C. thermophilum, was inspected for Ctr1/Ctr3 family members, following on the observation that proteins obtained from thermophiles tend to be more stable under purification conditions and amenable to biochemical characterization [58]

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Summary

Edited by Ruma Banerjee

Acquisition of the trace element copper (Cu) is critical to drive essential eukaryotic processes such as oxidative phosphorylation, iron mobilization, peptide hormone biogenesis, and connective tissue maturation. Hepatic or cardiac deletion of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase Cu assembly factor Sco results in enhanced Ctr turnover or changes in Ctr trafficking, respectively [38, 39] Together, these reports demonstrate the critical function and regulation of Ctr1/Ctr Cuϩ importers in cellular and organismal physiology and Cu homeostasis. Structural changes in Ctr1/3 proteins have been observed in the presence of Cuϩ ions [45], and the MXXXM motif in the second transmembrane domain is essential for Cuϩ import [16, 18, 29], there is currently no information demonstrating that Ctr1/Ctr proteins have intrinsic Cuϩ transport activity. Calculation of half-maximal transport (K1⁄2) and ion turnover rate for C. thermophilum Ctr3a demonstrates that this Ctr1/Ctr family transports with a high affinity but a surprisingly slow intrinsic rate, potentially to mitigate the toxicity associated with rapid Cuϩ influx

Results
Discussion
Yeast strains and plasmids
Phylogenetic analysis
Functional complementation assays
Fluorescence microscopy
Protein extraction and immunoblotting
Metal analysis
Statistical analysis
Lipid isolation and purification
Proteoliposome formation
In vitro metal transport assays
Full Text
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