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Publication : Copper is an endogenous modulator of neural circuit spontaneous activity.

First Author  Dodani SC Year  2014
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  111
Issue  46 Pages  16280-5
PubMed ID  25378701 Mgi Jnum  J:216738
Mgi Id  MGI:5609466 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1409796111
Citation  Dodani SC, et al. (2014) Copper is an endogenous modulator of neural circuit spontaneous activity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 111(46):16280-5
abstractText  For reasons that remain insufficiently understood, the brain requires among the highest levels of metals in the body for normal function. The traditional paradigm for this organ and others is that fluxes of alkali and alkaline earth metals are required for signaling, but transition metals are maintained in static, tightly bound reservoirs for metabolism and protection against oxidative stress. Here we show that copper is an endogenous modulator of spontaneous activity, a property of functional neural circuitry. Using Copper Fluor-3 (CF3), a new fluorescent Cu(+) sensor for one- and two-photon imaging, we show that neurons and neural tissue maintain basal stores of loosely bound copper that can be attenuated by chelation, which define a labile copper pool. Targeted disruption of these labile copper stores by acute chelation or genetic knockdown of the CTR1 (copper transporter 1) copper channel alters the spatiotemporal properties of spontaneous activity in developing hippocampal and retinal circuits. The data identify an essential role for copper neuronal function and suggest broader contributions of this transition metal to cell signaling.
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