NR ABRZ

AU Brown,D.R.

TI Copper and prion diseases

QU Biochemical Society Transactions 2002 Aug; 30(4): 742-5

PT journal article

AB Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies are diseases of animals and humans that are also termed prion diseases. These diseases are linked together because a normal brain glycoprotein termed the prion protein is converted to a readily detectable protease-resistant isoform. There is now strong evidence to suggest that apart from this difference in resistance a major difference between the isoforms is that the normal prion protein binds copper and has an anti-oxidant function. Brains from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease patients and brains from mice with experimental mouse scrapie have been shown to have changes in the levels of both copper and manganese. There is growing evidence that links prion diseases to disturbances of metal metabolism.

AD Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UK. bssdrb@bath.ac.uk

SP englisch

PO England

Autorenindex - authors index
Startseite - home page