ATOX1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Aliases | ATOX1 , ATX1, HAH1, antioxidant 1 copper chaperone | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
External IDs | OMIM: 602270 MGI: 1333855 HomoloGene: 2984 GeneCards: ATOX1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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ATOX1 is a copper metallochaperone protein that is encoded by the ATOX1 gene in humans. [5] [6] In mammals, ATOX1 plays a key role in copper homeostasis as it delivers copper from the cytosol to transporters ATP7A and ATP7B. [7] [8] [9] Homologous proteins are found in a wide variety of eukaryotes, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae as ATX1, and all contain a conserved metal binding domain. [7] [10]
ATOX1 is an abbreviation of the full name Antioxidant Protein 1. The nomenclature stems from initial characterization that showed that ATOX1 protected cells from reactive oxygen species. Since then, the primary role of ATOX1 has been established as a copper metallochaperone protein found in the cytoplasm of eukaryotes. [7] A metallochaperone is an important protein that has metal trafficking and sequestration roles. As a metal sequestration protein, ATOX1 is capable of binding free metals in vivo , in order to protect cells from generation of reactive oxygen species and mismetallation of metalloproteins. As a metal trafficking protein, ATOX1 is responsible for shuttling copper from the cytosol to ATPase transporters ATP7A and ATP7B that move copper to the trans-Golgi network or secretory vesicles. [7] [8] [9] In Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Atx1 delivers Cu(I) to a homologous transporter, Ccc2. The delivery of copper to ATPase transporters is vital for the subsequent insertion of copper into ceruloplasmin, a ferroxidase required for iron metabolism, within the golgi apparatus. [7] In addition to the metallochaperone function, recent reports have characterized ATOX1 as a cyclin D1 transcription factor. [8]
ATOX1 has a ferrodoxin-like βαββαβ fold and coordinates to Cu(I) via a MXCXXC binding motif located in between the first β-sheet and α-helix. [7] [9] The metal binding motif is largely solvent exposed in Apo-ATOX1 and a conformational change is induced upon coordination to Cu(I). [9] [10] Cu(I) is coordinated in a distorted linear geometry to sulfurs of cystine to form a bond angle of 120°. [9] The overall -1 charge of the primary coordination sphere is stabilized through the secondary coordination sphere that contains a proximal positively charged lysine. [9] [10] ATOX1 also binds Hg(II), Cd(II), Ag(I), and cisplatin via this motif, but a physiological role, if any, is not yet known. [9]
ATOX1 transfers Cu(I) to transporters ATP7A and ATP7B. [7] [8] [9] Transfer occurs via a ligand exchange mechanism, where Cu(I) transiently adopts a 3-coordinate geometry with cysteine ligands from ATOX1 and the associated transporter. [9] The ligand exchange mechanism allows for faster exchange than a diffusion mechanism and imparts specificity for both the metal and transporter. [11] Since the ligand exchange accelerates that transfer and the reaction has a shallow thermodynamic gradient, it is said to be under kinetic control rather than thermodynamic control. [9] [11]
Although there are presently no known diseases directly associated with ATOX1 malfunction, there is currently active research in a few areas:
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