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Journal Of Trace Elements In Medicine And Biology • April 2015<br />

The binding, transport and fate of aluminium in biological cells<br />

Author information<br />

Exley C1, Mold MJ2.<br />

The Birchall Centre, Lennard-Jones Laboratories<br />

Keele University, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK<br />

c.exley@keele.ac.uk<br />

Abstract<br />

Aluminium is the most abundant metal in the Earth’s crust and yet, paradoxically, it has no known<br />

biological function. Aluminium is biochemically reactive, it is simply that it is not required for any<br />

essential process in extant biota. There is evidence neither of element-specific nor evolutionarily<br />

conserved aluminium biochemistry. This means that there are no ligands or chaperones which are<br />

specific to its transport, there are no transporters or channels to selectively facilitate its passage<br />

across membranes, there are no intracellular storage proteins to aid its cellular homeostasis and<br />

there are no pathways which evolved to enable the metabolism and excretion of aluminium. Of<br />

course, aluminium is found in every compartment of every cell of every organism, from virus<br />

through to Man. Herein we have investigated each of the ‘silent’ pathways and metabolic events<br />

which together constitute a form of aluminium homeostasis in biota, identifying and evaluating as<br />

far as is possible what is known and, equally importantly, what is unknown about its uptake, transport,<br />

storage and excretion.<br />

“Of course, aluminium is found in every compartment<br />

of every cell of every organism, from virus through to Man.<br />

Herein we have investigated each of the ‘silent’ pathways<br />

and metabolic events which together constitute a form of<br />

aluminium homeostasis in biota, identifying and evaluating<br />

as far as is possible what is known and, equally importantly,<br />

what is unknown about its uptake, transport, storage and excretion.”<br />

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25498314

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