A New Metal Detector to Study Human Disease:
Zinc ResearchSource: American Chemical Society
Zinc may be a familiar dietary supplement to millions of
health-conscious people, but it remains a mystery metal to
scientists who study zinc’s role in Alzheimer’s disease, stroke
and other health problems.
They are just beginning to fathom how the body keeps levels
of zinc under the precise control that spells the difference
between health and disease.
Researchers now have developed a biochemical metal detector
to help crack the mystery. It is a biosensor that has yielded
the first measurements of the tiny amounts of zinc ordinarily
present inside living cells.
The study appears in the current issue of ACS Chemical
Biology, the newest of 34 journals published by the American
Chemical Society, the world’s largest scientific
organization.
It was conducted by Rebecca A. Bozym and Richard B.
Thompson, Ph.D. of the department of biochemistry and molecular
biology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore,
and Andrea K. Stoddard and Carol A. Fierke, Ph.D. of the
Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
“The question of how much zinc is available in a cell has
emerged at the forefront of chemical biology,” Amy R. Barrios,
Ph.D., of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles,
wrote in an accompanying Point of View in ACS Chemical
Biology.
Barrios described the new research as “a critical step
forward,” and predicted “many more exciting breakthroughs” in
measuring levels of metals in human cells.
Just 2-3 grams of zinc (the weight of a penny coin) exist in
the entire human body. The metal is a key building block in
enzymes and other substances involved in functioning of the
nervous system, the immune response, and the reproductive
system.
“We believe this new technique can help us understand how
zinc is involved in plaque formation in Alzheimer’s disease,
how prolonged seizures or stroke kill brain cells, and how the
cell normally allocates zinc to different proteins,” said
Thompson.
Thompson explained that almost all zinc inside cells is
incorporated into proteins, where it plays many vital roles,
such as helping to read the genetic code of DNA.
“We know that if there is much zinc in the cell that is not
attached to protein or otherwise encapsulated — so-called ‘free
zinc’ —the cell is stressed or may be undergoing programmed
cell death. This has been observed in animal models of epilepsy
and stroke.”
In the past, scientists could only measure the relatively
high levels of zinc in sick cells. The new sensing technology
can measure very low free zinc concentrations in healthy
cells.
The technique uses a special protein molecule that has been
re-engineered to report when zinc becomes stuck to it as a
change in luminescence that can be seen in the microscope. This
protein (originally found in blood cells) is very selective,
recognizing tiny levels of free zinc even in the presence of
the million-fold higher levels of other metals present in
cells, such as calcium or magnesium.
Because proper zinc levels are so important in health and
disease, scientists have been seeking ways of measuring zinc
inside and outside of cells for more than a decade.
“This is an important discovery,” said Sarah B. Tegen,
Ph.D., managing editor of ACS Chemical Biology. “We need to
know how the body controls levels of zinc inside cells. Too
much zinc can kill nerve cells. With too little, nerve cells
will not work properly.
“Now we have a metal detector, technology that can measure
tiny amounts of zinc in living cells. Understanding how zinc is
stored and released in different cells throughout the body may
help us understand some of the nerve damage that occurs during
a stroke and other nerve injuries.”
— Michael Woods
The online version of the research paper cited above was
initially published March 10 on the journal’s Web site.
Journalists can arrange access to this site by sending an
e-mail to newsroom@acs.org or calling the contact person for
this release.
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