Journal article

Essential roles in development and pigmentation for the Drosophila copper transporter DmATP7

M Norgate, E Lee, A Southon, A Farlow, P Batterham, J Camakaris, R Burke

Molecular Biology of the Cell | Published : 2006

Abstract

Defects in the mammalian Menkes and Wilson copper transporting P-type ATPases cause severe copper homeostasis disease phenotypes in humans. Here, we find that DmATP7, the sole Drosophila orthologue of the Menkes and Wilson genes, is vital for uptake of copper in vivo. Analysis of a DmATP7 loss-of-function allele shows that DmATP7 is essential in embryogenesis, early larval development, and adult pigmentation and is probably required for copper uptake from the diet. These phenotypes are analogous to those caused by mutation in the mouse and human Menkes genes, suggesting that like Menkes, DmATP7 plays at least two roles at the cellular level: delivering copper to cuproenzymes required for pig..

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University of Melbourne Researchers