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Elesclomol alleviates Menkes pathology and mortality by escorting Cu to cuproenzymes in mice.

Liam M GuthrieShivatheja SomaSai YuanAndres SilvaMohammad ZulkifliThomas C SnavelyHannah Faith GreeneElyssa NunezBrogan LynchCourtney De VilleVinit C ShanbhagFranklin R LopezArjun AcharyaMichael J PetrisByung-Eun KimVishal M GohilJames C Sacchettini
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Loss-of-function mutations in the copper (Cu) transporter ATP7A cause Menkes disease. Menkes is an infantile, fatal, hereditary copper-deficiency disorder that is characterized by progressive neurological injury culminating in death, typically by 3 years of age. Severe copper deficiency leads to multiple pathologies, including impaired energy generation caused by cytochrome c oxidase dysfunction in the mitochondria. Here we report that the small molecule elesclomol escorted copper to the mitochondria and increased cytochrome c oxidase levels in the brain. Through this mechanism, elesclomol prevented detrimental neurodegenerative changes and improved the survival of the mottled-brindled mouse-a murine model of severe Menkes disease. Thus, elesclomol holds promise for the treatment of Menkes and associated disorders of hereditary copper deficiency.
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