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Modulation of copper accumulation and copper-induced toxicity by antioxidants and copper chelators in cultured primary brain astrocytes
Institution:1. Center for Biomolecular Interactions Bremen, Faculty 2 (Biology/Chemistry), University of Bremen, PO Box 330440, D-28334 Bremen, Germany;2. Center for Environmental Research and Sustainable Technology, Leobener Strasse, D-28359 Bremen, Germany;3. Department of Physiology (Cell Physiology Research Group), University of Extremadura, E-10003 Caceres, Spain;1. Department of Hygiene and Public Health, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan;2. Department of Pediatrics, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan;1. Petroleum and Gas Research Laboratory, Climate Change Research Division, Korea Institute of Energy Research, Jang-dong 71-2, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-343, Republic of Korea;2. Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA;1. Disciplina de Neurociência, Escola Paulista de Medicina/Universidade Federal de São Paulo (EPM/UNIFESP), São Paulo, Brazil;2. Programa de Estudos Pós-Graduado em Fonoaudiologia, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP), Departamento de Fonoaudiologia, Escola Paulista de Medicina/Universidade Federal de São Paulo (EPM/UNIFESP), São Paulo, Brazil;3. Krankenanstalt Rudolfstiftung, Vienna, Austria
Abstract:Copper is essential for several important cellular processes, but an excess of copper can also lead to oxidative damage. In brain, astrocytes are considered to play a pivotal role in the copper homeostasis and antioxidative defence. To investigate whether antioxidants and copper chelators can modulate the uptake and the toxicity of copper ions in brain astrocytes, we used primary astrocytes as cell culture model. These cells accumulated substantial amounts of copper during exposure to copper chloride. Copper accumulation was accompanied by a time- and concentration-dependent loss in cell viability, as demonstrated by a lowering in cellular MTT reduction capacity and by an increase in membrane permeability for propidium iodide. During incubations in the presence of the antioxidants ascorbate, trolox or ebselen, the specific cellular copper content and the toxicity in copper chloride-treated astrocyte cultures were strongly increased. In contrast, the presence of the copper chelators bathocuproine disulfonate or tetrathiomolybdate lowered the cellular copper accumulation and the copper-induced as well as the ascorbate-accelerated copper toxicity was fully prevented. These data suggest that predominantly the cellular content of copper determines copper-induced toxicity in brain astrocytes.
Keywords:Astrocytes  Antioxidants  Chelators  Copper  ROS  Toxicity
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