This article was just released:
"Low levels of copper disrupt brain amyloid-β homeostasis by altering its production and clearance"
www.pnas.org/content/110/36/14771.full.pdf
From the Discussion:
The unique findings are as follows: (i) Cu accumulated in brain capillaries but not in the parenchyma of aging mice and selectively reduced levels of LRP1, a transporter of Aβ, which in turn contributed to increased levels of Aβ in brain. (ii) Mice chronically dosed with low levels of Cu (0.13 mg/L) in their drinking water for 90 d, starting at 2 mo of age, had the same effects on LRP1 and brain Aβ as in the aging mice.
...
Faulty Aβ clearance across the BBB, due to increased Cu levels in the aging brain endothelium may lead to neurotoxic Aβ accumulation in normal brains, which may contribute to the development of the sporadic form of AD.
...
Currently, there are no treatments for AD, and all clinical trials have so far failed. Alternative approaches are urgently needed to delay/prevent the onset of this devastating disease. Whereas the role of environmental factors in the development of the sporadic form of AD is controversial, long-term exposure to higher levels of Cu may contribute to this process, at least in some cases. D-penicillamine, a Cu chelator that does not cross the BBB, reduced oxidative stress in patients with AD. PBT2, a hydrophilic copper–zinc chaperone, which crosses the BBB, improved cognition in clinical trials (13, 61). Intracellular translocation of Zn and Cu via PBT2 may be an important mechanism of action for PBT2 (62). Our data suggest that Cu critically regulates LRP1-mediated Aβ clearance across the BBB and contributes to increased Aβ production and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of AD. Thus, Cu-specific chelating agents, chaperones, or antioxidants may reduce Cu-induced Aβ accumulation in brain, which should, by extension, prevent Aβ accumulation in brain and improve cognition in AD.
So have a screwed myself over by having taken zinc supplements with 300mcg of copper for quite a while? I even took some copper supplements for a while after I got peripheral neuropathy which some doctor said could have been caused by a copper deficiency.
If zinc really does need to be taken with copper, should zinc supplementation also be avoided?
Edited by smithx, 10 September 2013 - 07:32 AM.