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Publication : Unexpected vascular enrichment of SCO1 over SCO2 in mammalian tissues: implications for human mitochondrial disease.

First Author  Brosel S Year  2010
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  177
Issue  5 Pages  2541-8
PubMed ID  20864674 Mgi Jnum  J:166261
Mgi Id  MGI:4840175 Doi  10.2353/ajpath.2010.100229
Citation  Brosel S, et al. (2010) Unexpected vascular enrichment of SCO1 over SCO2 in mammalian tissues: implications for human mitochondrial disease. Am J Pathol 177(5):2541-8
abstractText  Mammalian SCO1 and SCO2 are evolutionarily-related copper-binding proteins that are required for the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase (COX), a mitochondrial respiratory chain complex, but the exact roles that they play in the assembly process are unclear. Mutations in both SCO1 and SCO2 are associated with distinct clinical phenotypes as well as tissue-specific COX deficiency, but the reason for such tissue specificity is unknown. We show in this study that although both genes are expressed ubiquitously in all mouse and human tissues examined, surprisingly, SCO1 localizes predominantly to blood vessels, whereas SCO2 is barely detectable in this tissue. To our knowledge, SCO1 is the first known example of a mitochondrial protein that is strongly expressed in the vasculature. We also show that the expression of SCO1, but not of SCO2, is very high in liver (the tissue most affected in SCO1-mutant patients), whereas the reverse holds true in muscle (the tissue most affected in SCO2-mutant patients). Our findings may help explain the differences in clinical presentations due to mutations in SCO1 and SCO2 and provide clues regarding the partially nonoverlapping functions of these two proteins.
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