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1.
Summary Iron is essential for tumor cell growth. Previous studies have demonstrated that apart from transferrin-bound iron uptake, mammalian cells also possess a transport system capable of efficiently obtaining iron from small molecular weight iron chelates (Sturrock et al., 1990). In the present study, we have examined the ability of tumor cells to grow in the presence of low molecular weight iron chelates of citrate. In chemically defined serum-free medium, most human tumor cell lines required either transferrin (5 μg/ml) or a higher concentration of ferric citrate (500 μM) as an iron source. However, we have also found that from 13 human cell lines tested, 4 were capable of long-term growth in transferrin-free medium with a substantially lower concentration of ferric citrate (5 μM). When grown in medium containing transferrin, both regular and low-iron dependent cell lines use transferrin-bound iron. Growth of both cell types in transferrin medium was inhibited to a certain degree by monoclonal antibody 42/6, which specifically blocks the binding of transferrin to the transferrin receptor. On the contrary, growth of low-iron dependent cell lines in transferrin-free, low-iron medium (5 μM ferric citrate) could not be inhibited by monoclonal antibody 42/6. Furthermore, no autocrine production of transferrin was observed. Low-iron dependent cell lines still remain sensitive to iron depletion as the iron(III) chelator, desferrioxamine, inhibited their growth. We conclude that low-iron dependent tumor cells in transferrin-free, low-iron medium may employ a previously unknown mechanism for uptake of non-transferrin-bound iron that allows them to efficiently use low concentrations of ferric citrate as an iron source. The results are discussed in the context of alternative iron uptake mechanisms to the well-characterized receptor-mediated endocytosis process.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The mechanism of iron uptake by avian erythroid cells was investigated using cells from 7 and 15-day chicken embryos, and chicken serum transferrin and conalbumin (ovotransferrin) labelled with125I and59Fe. Endocytosis of the protein was determined by incubation of the cells with Pronase at 4°C to distinguish internalized from surface-bound protein.Iron was taken up by the cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis of transferrin or conalbumin. The receptors had the same affinity for serum transferrin and conalbumin. Endocytosis of diferric transferrin and conalbumin and exocytosis of apo-protein occurred at the same rates, indicating that iron donation to the cells occurred during the process of intracellular cycling of the protein. The recycling time was approximately 4 min. The rate of endocytosis of diferric protein varied with incubation temperature and at each temperature the rate of endocytosis was sufficient to account for the iron accumulated by the cells. These results and experiments with a variety of inhibitors confirmed the role of endocytosis in iron uptake.The mean cell volumes, receptor numbers and iron uptake rates of 7-day embryo cells were approximately twice those of 15-day embryo cells but the protein recycling times were approximately the same. Hence, the level of transferrin receptors is probably the main determinant of the rate of iron uptake during development of chicken erythroid cells.Transferrins from a variety of mammalian species were unable to donate iron to the chicken cells, but toad (Bufo marinus) transferrin could do so at a slow rate. The mechanism of iron uptake by developing chicken erythroid cells appears to be similar to that described for mammalian cells, although receptor numbers and iron uptake rates are lower than those reported for mammalian cells at a similar stage of development.Abbreviations BSS Hanks balanced salt solution - PBS phosphate buffered saline - MCV mean corpuscular volume - CCCP carbonyl cyanide-M-chlorophenyl hydrazone  相似文献   

3.
4.
Placental transferrin receptors, located at the apical side of syncytiotrophoblast, mediate placental iron uptake. Regulation of transferrin receptors on the fetal-maternal exchange area could be a major determinant in the regulation of trans-placental iron transport.Transferrin receptor expression in cultured human term cytotrophoblasts is on a much lower level than in choriocarcinoma cells, with a higher proportion of receptors located on the cell surface. Differentiation of cells, either due to longer culture periods or to 8-bromo-cAMP treatment does not lead to an increase of transferrin receptor expression. In vitro, the level of expression is largely regulated by the cellular density in the culture dishes. Low cellular occupancy of the dish leads to a high level of transferrin receptors. Treatment with iron-sources results in a down regulation of transferrin receptors.Thus, though the level of transferrin receptors in cultured normal trophoblast is at a constant level, unaffected by differentiation, high levels of maternal transferrin-iron availability can lead to a decrease in placental iron uptake. This feed-back mechanism makes placental iron uptake independent of maternal iron stores.Abbreviations hCG human Chorionic Gonadotrophin - TfR Transferrin Receptor  相似文献   

5.
Methods were developed for obtaining highly viable mouse hepatocytes in single cell suspension and for maintaining the hepatocytes in adherent static culture. The characteristics of transferrin binding and iron uptake into these hepatocytes was investigated. (1) After attachment to culture dishes for 18–24 h hepatocytes displayed an accelerating rate of iron uptake with time. Immediately after isolation mouse hepatocytes in suspension exhibited a linear iron uptake rate of 1.14·105molecules/cell per min in 5 μM transferrin. Iron uptake also increased with increasing transferrin concentration both in suspension and adherent culture. Pinocytosis measured in isolated hepatocytes could account only for 10–20% of the total iron uptake. Iron uptake was completely inhibited at 4°C. (2) A transferrin binding component which saturated at 0.5 μM diferric transferrin was detected. The number of specific, saturable diferric transferrin binding sites on mouse hepatocytes was 4.4·104±1.9·104 for cells in suspension and 6.6·104±2.3·104 for adherent cultured cells. The apparent association constants were 1.23·107 1·mol?1 and 3.4·106 1·mol?1 for suspension and cultured cells respectively. (3) Mouse hepatocytes also displayed a large component of non-saturable transferrin binding sites. This binding increased linearly with transferrin concentration and appeared to contribute to iron uptake in mouse hepatocytes. Assuming that only saturable transferrin binding sites donate iron, the rate of iron uptake is about 2.5 molecules iron/receptor per min at 5 μM transferrin in both suspension and adherent cells and increases to 4 molecules iron/receptor per min at 10 μM transferrin in adherent cultured cells. These rates are considerably greater than the 0.5 molcules/receptor per min observed at 0.5 μM transferrin, the concentration at which the specific transferrin binding sites are fully occupied. The data suggest that either the non-saturable binding component donates some iron or that this component stimulates the saturable component to increase the rate of iron uptake. (4) During incubations at 4°C the majority of the transferrin bound to both saturable and nonsaturable binding sites lost one or more iron atoms. Incubations including 2 mM α,α′-dipyridyl (an Fe11 chelator) decreased the cell associated 59Fe at both 4 and 37°C while completely inhibiting iron uptake within 2–3 min of exposure at 37°C. These observations suggest that most if not all iron is loosened from transferrin upon interaction of transferrin with the hepatocyte membrane. There is also greater sensitivity of 59Fe uptake compared to transferrin binding to pronase digestion, suggesting that an iron acceptor moiety on the cell surface is available to proteolysis.  相似文献   

6.
7.
 The effectiveness and mechanism of iron acquisition from transferrin or lactoferrin by Aeromonas hydrophila has been analyzed with regard to the pathogenesis of this microbe. The ability of A. hydrophila's siderophore, amonabactin, to remove iron from transferrin was evaluated with in vitro competition experiments. The kinetics of iron removal from the three molecular forms of ferric transferrin (diferric, N- and C-terminal monoferric) were investigated by separating each form by urea gel electrophoresis. The first direct determination of individual microscopic rates of iron removal from diferric transferrin is a result. A. hydrophila 495A2 was cultured in an iron-starved defined medium and the growth monitored. Addition of transferrin or lactoferrin promoted bacterial growth. Growth promotion was independent of the level of transferrin or lactoferrin iron saturation (between 30 and 100%), even when the protein was sequestered inside dialysis tubing. Siderophore production was also increased when transferrin or lactoferrin was enclosed in a dialysis tube. Cell yield and growth rate were identical in experiments where transferrin was present inside or outside the dialysis tube, indicating that binding of transferrin was not essential and that the siderophore plays a major role in iron uptake from transferrin. The rate of iron removal from diferric transferrin shows a hyperbolic dependence on amonabactin concentration. Surprisingly, amonabactin cannot remove iron from the more weakly binding N-terminal site of monoferric transferrin, while it is able to remove iron from the more strongly binding C-terminal site of monoferric transferrin. Iron from both sites is removed from diferric transferrin and it is the N-terminal site (which does not release iron in the monoferric protein) that releases iron more rapidly! It is apparent that there is a significant interaction of the two lobes of the protein with regard to the chelator access. Taken together, these results support an amonabactin-dependent mechanism for iron removal by A. hydrophila from transferrin and lactoferrin. The implications of these findings for an amonabactin-dependent mechanism for iron removal by A. hydrophila from transferrin and lactoferrin are discussed. Received: 8 August 1999 / Accepted: 22 October 1999  相似文献   

8.
Summary Transferrin-receptor interactions and iron uptake were studied in eleven different species of vertebrate animals (3 eutherian mammals, 3 marsupials, 2 reptiles and 1 bird, amphibian and bony fish). In the initial experiments it was shown that the uptake of transferrin-bound iron by immature erythroid cells from marsupial and reptilian species occurs by receptor-mediated endocytosis as in other vertebrate animals.Reticulocytes were incubated with125I-59Fe-labelled transferrins from heterologous species and the results for iron and transferrin uptake compared with those obtained with the homologous protein. Cells from eutherian mammals were able to take up transferrin and iron from other eutherians and from the bob-tailed lizard but not from marsupials and other submammalian species. With marsupials and reptiles a similar specificity was observed, and the marsupial cells could also utilize chicken transferrin but not vice versa.The results were extended by performing competition experiments in which the cells were incubated with radiolabelled homologous transferrin in the presence of increasing concentrations of non-radioactive heterologous transferrins. From the ability of the heterologous proteins to inhibit uptake of the homologous protein relative association constants (K a 1) for the transferrin-receptor interactions could be calculated. TheseK a 1 values reflected the patterns observed in the first series of experiments.These studies demonstrate that, although specificity exists in transferrin-receptor interactions throughout the range of vertebrate animals, in several instances reactivity between widely divergent species is also observed. Hence, structural similarities have been maintained throughout evolution. Nevertheless, no evidence of interaction between transferrin and its receptor from the two divisions of the Mammalia, the eutherians and the marsupials, was observed.Abbreviations BSS Hanks balanced salt solution - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - RRS Rana Ringer solution  相似文献   

9.
Iron piracy: acquisition of transferrin-bound iron by bacterial pathogens   总被引:40,自引:5,他引:35  
The mechanism of iron utilization from transferrin has been most extensively characterized in the pathogenic Neisseria species and Haemophilus species. Two transferrin-binding proteins, Tbp1 and Tbp2, have been identified in these pathogens and are thought to be components of the transferrin receptor. Tbp1 appears to be an integral, TonB-dependent outer membrane protein while Tbp2, a lipoprotein, may be peripherally associated with the outer membrane. The relative contribution of each of these proteins to transferrin binding and utilization is discussed and a model of iron uptake from transferrin is presented. Sequence comparisons of the genes encoding neisserial transferrin-binding proteins suggest that they are probably under positive selection for variation and may have resulted from inter-species genetic exchange.  相似文献   

10.
The transferrin receptor family is represented by at least seven different homologous proteins in primates. Transferrin receptor (TfR1) is a type II membrane glycoprotein that, as a cell surface homodimer, binds iron-loaded transferrin as part of the process of iron transfer and uptake. Other family members include transferrin receptor 2 (TfR2), glutamate carboxypeptidase II (GCP2 or PSMA), N-acetylated α-linked acidic dipeptidase-like protein (NLDL), N-acetylated α-linked acidic dipeptidase 2 (NAALAD2), and prostate-specific membrane antigen-like protein (PMSAL/GCPIII). We compared 86 different sequences from 24 different species, from mammals to fungi. Through this comparison, we have identified several highly conserved residues specific to each family not previously associated with clinical mutations. The evolutionary history of the TfR/GCP2 family shows repeated episodes of duplications consistent with recent theories that nondispensable, slowly evolving genes are more likely to form multiple gene families. [Reviewing Editor: Dr. Gail Simmons]  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics and thermodynamics of Ga(III) exchange between gallium mononitrilotriacetate and human serum transferrin as well as those of the interaction between gallium-loaded transferrin and the transferrin receptor 1 were investigated in neutral media. Gallium is exchanged between the chelate and the C-site of human serum apotransferrin in interaction with bicarbonate in about 50 s to yield an intermediate complex with an equilibrium constant K 1 = (3.9 ± 1.2) × 10−2, a direct second-order rate constant k 1 = 425 ± 50 M−1 s−1 and a reverse second-order rate constant k −1 = (1.1 ± 3) × 104 M−1 s−1. The intermediate complex loses a single proton with proton dissociation constant K 1a = 80 ± 40 nM to yield a first kinetic product. This product then undergoes a modification in its conformation which lasts about 500 s to produce a second kinetic intermediate, which in turn undergoes a final extremely slow (several hours) modification in its conformation to yield the gallium-saturated transferrin in its final state. The mechanism of gallium uptake differs from that of iron and does not involve the same transitions in conformation reported during iron uptake. The interaction of gallium-loaded transferrin with the transferrin receptor occurs in a single very fast kinetic step with a dissociation constant K d = 1.10 ± 0.12 μM and a second-order rate constant k d = (1.15 ± 0.3) × 1010 M−1 s−1. This mechanism is different from that observed with the ferric holotransferrin and suggests that the interaction between the receptor and gallium-loaded transferrin probably takes place on the helical domain of the receptor which is specific for the C-site of transferrin and HFE. The relevance of gallium incorporation by the transferrin receptor-mediated iron-acquisition pathway is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of iron transport in Francisella is still a puzzle since none of the sequenced Francisella strains appears to encode a TonB protein, the energy transducer of the proton motive force necessary to act on the bacterial outer membrane siderophore receptor to allow the internalization of iron. In this work we demonstrate using kinetic experiments of radioactive Fe3+ utilization, that iron uptake in Francisella novicida, although with no recognizable TonB protein, is indeed dependent on energy generated by the proton motive force. Moreover, mutants of a predicted outer membrane receptor still transport iron and are sensitive to the iron dependent antimicrobial compound streptonigrin. Our studies suggest that alternative pathways to internalize iron might exist in Francisella.  相似文献   

13.
The low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) mediates the hepatic uptake of circulating low-density lipoproteins (LDLs), a process that modulates the development of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. We recently identified RAB10, encoding a small GTPase, as a positive regulator of LDL uptake in hepatocellular carcinoma cells (HuH7) in a genome-wide CRISPR screen, though the underlying molecular mechanism for this effect was unknown. We now report that RAB10 regulates hepatocyte LDL uptake by promoting the recycling of endocytosed LDLR from RAB11-positive endosomes to the plasma membrane. We also show that RAB10 similarly promotes the recycling of the transferrin receptor, which binds the transferrin protein that mediates the transport of iron in the blood, albeit from a distinct RAB4-positive compartment. Taken together, our findings suggest a model in which RAB10 regulates LDL and transferrin uptake by promoting both slow and rapid recycling routes for their respective receptor proteins.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The mechanism of transferrin uptake by reticulocytes was investigated using rabbit transferrin labelled with 125I and 59Fe and rabbit reticulocytes which had been treated with trypsin, Pronase or neuraminidase. Low concentrations of the proteolytic enzymes produced a small increase in transferrin and iron uptake by the cells. However, higher concentrations or incubation of the cells with the enzymes for longer periods caused a marked fall in transferrin and iron uptake. This fall was associated with a reduction in the proportion of cellular transferrin which was bound to a cell membrane component solubilized with the non-ionic detergent, Teric 12A9. The effect of trypsin and Pronase on transferrin release from the cells was investigated in the absence and in the presence of N-ethylmaleimide which inhibits the normal process of transferrin release. It was found that only a small proportion of transferrin which had been taken up by reticulocytes at 37°C but nearly all that taken up 4°C was released when the cells were subsequently incubated with trypsin plus N-ethylmaleimide, despite the fact that about 80% of the 59Fe in the cells was released in both instances. Neuraminidase produced no change in transferrin and iron uptake by the cells.These experiments provide evidence that transferrin uptake by reticulocytes requires interaction with a receptor which is protein in nature and that following uptake at 37°C, most of the transferrin is located at a site unavailable to the action of proteolytic enzymes. The results support the hypothesis that transferrin enters reticulocytes by endocytosis.  相似文献   

16.
Vibrio vulnificus is a marine bacterium associated with human and fish (mainly farmed eels) diseases globally known as vibriosis. The ability to infect and overcome eel innate immunity relies on a virulence plasmid (pVvbt2) specific for biotype 2 (Bt2) strains. In the present study, we demonstrated that pVvbt2 encodes a host‐specific iron acquisition system that depends on an outer membrane receptor for eel transferrin called Vep20. The inactivation of vep20 did not affect either bacterial growth in human plasma or virulence for mice, while bacterial growth in eel blood/plasma was abolished and virulence for eels was significantly impaired. Furthermore, vep20 is an iron‐regulated gene overexpressed in eel blood during artificially induced vibriosis both in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, homologues to vep20 were identified in the transferable plasmids of two fish pathogen species of broad‐host range, Vibrio harveyi (pVh1) and Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae (pPHDD1). These data suggest that Vep20 belongs to a new family of plasmid‐encoded fish‐specific transferrin receptors, and the acquisition of these plasmids through horizontal gene transfer is likely positively selected in the fish‐farming environment. Moreover, we propose Ftbp (fish transferrin binding proteins) as a formal name for this family of proteins.  相似文献   

17.
A dynamic model of the meningococcal transferrin receptor.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Iron is an essential nutrient for all organisms and consequently, the ability to bind transferrin and sequester iron from his source constitutes a distinct advantage to a blood-borne bacterial pathogen. Levels of free iron are strictly limited in human serum, largely through the action of the iron-binding protein transferrin. The acquisition of trasferrin-iron is coincident with pathogenicity among Neisseria species and a limited number of other pathogens of human and veterinary significance. In Neisseria meningitidis, transferrin binding relies on two co-expressed, outer membrane proteins distinct in aspects of both structure and function. These proteins are independently and simultaneously capable of binding human transferrin and both are required for the optimal uptake of iron from this source. It has been established that transferrin-binding proteins (designated TbpA and TbpB) form a discrete, specific complex which may be composed of a transmembrane species (composed of the TbpA dimer) associated with a single surface-exposed lipoprotein (TbpB). This more exposed protein is capable of selectively binding iron-saturated transferrin and the receptor complex has ligand-binding properties which are distinct from either of its components. Previous in vivo analyses of N. gonorrhoeae, which utilizes a closely related transferrin-iron uptake system, indicated that this receptor exists in several conformations influenced in part by the presence (or absence) of transferrin.Here we propose a dynamic model of the meningococcal transferrin receptor which is fully consistent with the current data concerning this subject. We suggest that TbpB serves as the initial binding site for iron-saturated transferrin and brings this ligand close to the associated transmembrane dimer, enabling additional binding events and orientating transferrin over the dual TbpA pores. The antagonistic association of these receptor proteins with a single ligand molecule may also induce conformational change in transferrin, thereby favouring the release of iron. As, in vivo, transferrin may have iron in one or both lobes, this dynamic molecular arrangement would enable iron uptake from either iron-binding site. In addition, the predicted molecular dimensions of the putative TbpA dimer and hTf are fully consistent with these proposals. Given the diverse data used in the formulation of this model and the consistent characteristics of transferrin binding among several significant Gram-negative pathogens, we speculate that such receptor-ligand interactions may be, at least in part, conserved between species. Consequently, this model may be applicable to bacteria other than N. meningitidis.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The role of specific transferrin (Tf) and Tf receptor interaction on brain capillary endothelial cells in iron transport from the plasma to the brain was investigated by using Tf from several species of animals labeled with 59Fe and 125I, and 15-day and adult rats. The rate of iron transfer was much greater in the 15-day rats. It was greatest with Tf from the mammals, rat, rabbit and human, but much lower with chicken ovotransferrin and quokka (a marsupial), toad, lizard, crocodile, and fish Tf. The uptake of Tf by the brain showed a similar pattern, except for a very high uptake of ovotransferrin (ovo Tf). Iron uptake by the femurs (a source of bone marrow) was also high with Tf from the mammalian species and low with the other types of Tf, but showed little change with aging of the animals. It is concluded that iron transport into the brain is dependent on the function of Tf receptors, probably on capillary endothelial cells, and that these receptors show the same type of species specificity as the receptors on immature erythroid cells. Also, the decrease in iron uptake by the brain as rats age from 15 days to adulthood is specific for the brain and is not a general effect of the aging process.Abbreviations Tf transferrin - ovo Tf ovotransferrin  相似文献   

19.
Iron, an essential nutrient for most microorganisms, is sequestered by the host to decrease the concentration of iron available to bacterial pathogens. Neisseria gonorrhoeae , the causative agent of gonorrhoea, can acquire iron by direct interaction with human iron-binding proteins, including the serum glycoprotein, transferrin. Iron internalization from host transferrin requires the expression of a bacterial receptor, which specifically recognizes the human form of transferrin. Two gonococcal transferrin-binding proteins have been implicated in transferrin receptor function, TbpA and TbpB. We constructed a gonococcal transferrin receptor mutant without the introduction of additional antibiotic resistance markers and tested its ability to cause experimental urethritis in human male volunteers. The transferrin receptor mutant was incapable of initiating urethritis, although the same inoculum size of the wild-type parent strain, FA1090, causes urethritis in >90% of inoculated volunteers. To our knowledge, this is the first experimental demonstration that a bacterial iron acquisition system is an essential virulence factor for human infection.  相似文献   

20.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae produces two transferrin binding proteins, TbpA and TbpB, which together enable efficient iron transport from human transferrin. We demonstrate that expression of the tbp genes is controlled by MisR, a response regulator in the two‐component regulatory system that also includes the sensor kinase MisS. The tbp genes were up‐regulated in the misR mutant under iron‐replete conditions but were conversely down‐regulated in the misR mutant under iron‐depleted conditions. The misR mutant was capable of transferrin‐iron uptake at only 50% of wild‐type levels, consistent with decreased tbp expression. We demonstrate that phosphorylated MisR specifically binds to the tbpBA promoter and that MisR interacts with five regions upstream of the tbpB start codon. These analyses confirm that MisR directly regulates tbpBA expression. The MisR binding sites in the gonococcus are only partially conserved in Neisseria meningitidis, which may explain why tbpBA was not MisR‐regulated in previous studies using this related pathogen. This is the first report of a trans‐acting protein factor other than Fur that can directly contribute to gonococcal tbpBA regulation.  相似文献   

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