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Regulation of ferritin and transferrin receptor mRNAs   总被引:45,自引:0,他引:45  
Iron regulates the synthesis of two proteins critical for iron metabolism, ferritin and the transferrin receptor, through novel mRNA/protein interactions. The mRNA regulatory sequence (iron-responsive element (IRE)) occurs in the 5'-untranslated region of all ferritin mRNAs and is repeated as five variations in the 3'-untranslated region of transferrin receptor mRNA. When iron is in excess, ferritin synthesis and iron storage increase. At the same time, transferrin receptor synthesis and iron uptake decrease. Location of the common IRE regulatory sequence in different noncoding regions of the two mRNAs may explain how iron can have opposite metabolic effects; when the IRE is in the 5'-untranslated region of ferritin mRNA, translation is enhanced by excess iron whereas the presence of the IREs in the 3'-untranslated region of the transferrin receptor mRNA leads to iron-dependent degradation. How and where iron actually acts is not yet known. A soluble 90-kDa regulatory protein which has been recently purified to homogeneity from liver and red cells specifically blocks translation of ferritin mRNA and binds IRE sequences but does not appear to be an iron-binding protein. The protein is the first specific eukaryotic mRNA regulator identified and confirms predictions 20 years old. Concerted regulation by iron of ferritin and transferrin receptor mRNAs may also define a more general strategy for using common mRNA sequences to coordinate the synthesis of metabolically related proteins.  相似文献   

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Cells tightly regulate iron levels through the activity of iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) that bind to RNA motifs called iron responsive elements (IREs). When cells become iron-depleted, IRPs bind to IREs present in the mRNAs of ferritin and the transferrin receptor, resulting in diminished translation of the ferritin mRNA and increased translation of the transferrin receptor mRNA. Similarly, body iron homeostasis is maintained through the control of intestinal iron absorption. Intestinal epithelia cells sense body iron through the basolateral endocytosis of plasma transferrin. Transferrin endocytosis results in enterocytes whose iron content will depend on the iron saturation of plasma transferrin. Cell iron levels, in turn, inversely correlate with intestinal iron absorption. In this study, we examined the relationship between the regulation of intestinal iron absorption and the regulation of intracellular iron levels by Caco-2 cells. We asserted that IRP activity closely correlates with apical iron uptake and transepithelial iron transport. Moreover, overexpression of IRE resulted in a very low labile or reactive iron pool and increased apical to basolateral iron flux. These results show that iron absorption is primarily regulated by the size of the labile iron pool, which in turn is regulated by the IRE/IRP system.  相似文献   

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Excess capacity of the iron regulatory protein system   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Iron regulatory proteins (IRP1 and IRP2) are master regulators of cellular iron metabolism. IRPs bind to iron-responsive elements (IREs) present in the untranslated regions of mRNAs encoding proteins of iron storage, uptake, transport, and export. Because simultaneous knockout of IRP1 and IRP2 is embryonically lethal, it has not been possible to use dual knockouts to explore the consequences of loss of both IRP1 and IRP2 in mammalian cells. In this report, we describe the use of small interfering RNA to assess the relative contributions of IRP1 and IRP2 in epithelial cells. Stable cell lines were created in which either IRP1, IRP2, or both were knocked down. Knockdown of IRP1 decreased IRE binding activity but did not affect ferritin H and transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) expression, whereas knockdown of IRP2 marginally affected IRE binding activity but caused an increase in ferritin H and a decrease in TfR1. Knockdown of both IRPs resulted in a greater reduction of IRE binding activity and more severe perturbation of ferritin H and TfR1 expression compared with single IRP knockdown. Even though the knockdown of IRP-1, IRP-2, or both was efficient, resulting in nondetectable protein and under 5% of wild type levels of mRNA, all stable knockdowns retained an ability to modulate ferritin H and TfR1 appropriately in response to iron challenge. However, further knockdown of IRPs accomplished by transient transfection of small interfering RNA in stable knockdown cells completely abolished the response of ferritin H and TfR1 to iron challenge, demonstrating an extensive excess capacity of the IRP system.  相似文献   

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Iron may populate distinct hepatocellular iron pools that differentially regulate expression of proteins such as ferritin and transferrin receptor (TfR) through iron-regulatory mRNA-binding proteins (IRPs), and may additionally regulate uptake and accumulation of non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI). We examined iron-regulatory protein (IRP) binding activity and ferritin/TfR expression in human hepatoma (HepG2) cells exposed to iron at different levels for different periods. Several iron-dependent RNA-binding activities were identified, but only IRP increased with beta-mercaptoethanol. With exposures between 0 and 20 microg/ml iron, decreases in IRP binding accompanied large changes in TfR and ferritin expression, while chelation of residual iron with deferoxamine (DFO) caused a large increase in IRP binding with little additional effect on TfR or ferritin expression. Cellular iron content increased beyond 4 days of exposure to iron at 20 microg/ml, when IRP binding, TfR, and ferritin had all reached stable levels. However, iron content of the cells plateaued by 7 days, or decreased with 24 h exposure to very high concentrations (>50 microg/ml) of iron. These results indicate that iron-replete HepG2 cells exhibit a narrow range of maximal responsiveness of the IRP-regulatory mechanism, whose functional response is blunted both by excessive iron exposure and by removal of iron from a chelatable pool. HepG2 cells are able to limit iron accumulation upon higher or prolonged exposure to NTBI, apparently independent of the IRP mechanism.  相似文献   

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Synthesis of proteins for iron homeostasis is regulated by specific, combinatorial mRNA/protein interactions between RNA stem-loop structures (iron-responsive elements, IREs) and iron-regulatory proteins (IRP1 and IRP2), controlling either mRNA translation or stability. The transferrin receptor 3'-untranslated region (TfR-3'-UTR) mRNA is unique in having five IREs, linked by AU-rich elements. A C-bulge in the stem of each TfR-IRE folds into an IRE that has low IRP2 binding, whereas a loop/bulge in the stem of the ferritin-IRE allows equivalent IRP1 and IRP2 binding. Effects of multiple IRE interactions with IRP1 and IRP2 were compared between the native TfR-3'-UTR sequence (5xIRE) and RNA with only 3 or 2 IREs. We show 1) equivalent IRP1 and IRP2 binding to multiple TfR-IRE RNAs; 2) increased IRP-dependent nuclease resistance of 5xIRE compared with lower IRE copy-number RNAs; 3) distorted TfR-IRE helix structure within the context of 5xIRE, detected by Cu-(phen)(2) binding/cleavage, that coincides with ferritin-IRE conformation and enhanced IRP2 binding; and 4) variable IRP1 and IRP2 expression in human cells and during development (IRP2-mRNA predominated). Changes in TfR-IRE structure conferred by the full length TfR-3'-UTR mRNA explain in part evolutionary conservation of multiple IRE-RNA, which allows TfR mRNA stabilization and receptor synthesis when IRP activity varies, and ensures iron uptake for cell growth.  相似文献   

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Iron regulates synthesis of the iron storage protein ferritin at the translational level through interaction between a stem-loop structure, the iron-responsive element (IRE), located in the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) of ferritin mRNAs, and a protein, the iron regulatory protein (IRP). The role of IRE secondary structure in translational regulation of ferritin synthesis was explored by introducing ferritin constructs containing mutations in the IRE into Rat-2 fibroblasts. Our in vivo studies demonstrate that size and sequence of the loop within the IRE and the distance and/or spatial relationship of this loop to the bulged nucleotide region closest to the loop must be preserved in order to observe iron-dependent translation of ferritin mRNA. In contrast, changes in nucleotide sequence of the upper stem can be introduced without affecting translational regulation in vivo, as long as a stem can be formed. Our in vivo results suggest that only a very small variation in the affinity of interaction of IRP with IRE can be tolerated in order to maintain iron-dependent regulation of translation.  相似文献   

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Iron responsive elements (IREs) are short stem-loop structures found in several mRNAs encoding proteins involved in cellular iron metabolism. Iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) control iron homeostasis through differential binding to the IREs, accommodating any sequence or structural variations that the IREs may present. Here we report the structure of IRP1 in complex with transferrin receptor 1 B (TfR B) IRE, and compare it to the complex with ferritin H (Ftn H) IRE. The two IREs are bound to IRP1 through nearly identical protein-RNA contacts, although their stem conformations are significantly different. These results support the view that binding of different IREs with IRP1 depends both on protein and RNA conformational plasticity, adapting to RNA variation while retaining conserved protein-RNA contacts.  相似文献   

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Mammalian cells regulate iron levels tightly through the activity of iron-regulatory proteins (IRPs) that bind to RNA motifs called iron-responsive elements (IREs). When cells become iron-depleted, IRPs bind to IREs present in the mRNAs of ferritin and the transferrin receptor, resulting in diminished translation of the ferritin mRNA and increased translation of the transferrin receptor mRNA. Likewise, intestinal epithelial cells regulate iron absorption by a process that also depends on the intracellular levels of iron. Although intestinal epithelial cells have an active IRE/IRP system, it has not been proven that this system is involved in the regulation of iron absorption in these cells. In this study, we characterized the effect of overexpression of the ferritin IRE on iron absorption by Caco-2 cells, a model of intestinal epithelial cells. Cells overexpressing ferritin IRE had increased levels of ferritin, whereas the levels of the transferrin receptor were decreased. Iron absorption in IRE-transfected cells was deregulated: iron uptake from the apical medium was increased, but the capacity to retain this newly incorporated iron diminished. Cells overexpressing IRE were not able to control iron absorption as a function of intracellular iron, because both iron-deficient cells as well as iron-loaded cells absorbed similarly high levels of iron. The labile iron pool of IRE-transfected cell was extremely low. Likewise, the reduction of the labile iron pool in control cells resulted in cells having increased iron absorption. These results indicate that cells overexpressing IRE do not regulate iron absorption, an effect associated with decreased levels of the regulatory iron pool.  相似文献   

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Iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) are cytoplasmic mRNA binding proteins involved in intracellular regulation of iron homeostasis. IRPs regulate expression of ferritin and transferrin receptor at the mRNA level by interacting with a conserved RNA structure termed the iron-responsive element (IRE). This concordant regulation of transferrin receptors and ferritin is designed so a cell can obtain iron when it is needed, and sequester iron when it is in excess. However, we have reported that iron accumulates in the brain in Alzheimer's disease without a concomitant increase in ferritin. An increase in iron without proper sequestration can increase the vulnerability of cells to oxidative stress. Oxidative stress is a component of many neurological diseases including Alzheimer's. We hypothesized that alterations in the IRP/IRE interaction could be the site at which iron mismanagement occurs in the Alzheimer's brains. In this report we demonstrate that in normal human brain extracts, the IRP is detected as a double IRE/IRP complex by RNA band shift assay, but in 2 of 6 Alzheimer's brain (AD) extracts examined a single IRE/IRP complex was obtained. Furthermore, the mobility of the single IRE/IRP complex in Alzheimer's brain extracts is decreased relative to the double IRE/IRP complex. Western blot and RNA band super shift assay demonstrate that IRP1 is involved in the formation of the single IRE/IRP complex. In vitro analyses suggest that the stability of the doublet complex and single AD complex are different. The single complex from the AD brain are more stable. A more stable IRE/IRP complex in the AD brain could increase stability of the transferrin receptor mRNA and inhibit ferritin synthesis. At the cellular level, the outcome of this alteration in the molecular regulatory mechanism would be increased iron accumulation without an increase in ferritin; identical to the observation we reported in AD brains. The appearance of the single IRE/IRP complex in Alzheimer's brain extracts is associated with relatively high endogenous ribonuclease activity. We propose that elevated RNase activity is one mechanism by which the iron regulatory system becomes dysfunctional.  相似文献   

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Iron homeostasis is tightly regulated, as cells work to conserve this essential but potentially toxic metal. The translation of many iron proteins is controlled by the binding of two cytoplasmic proteins, iron regulatory protein 1 and 2 (IRP1 and IRP2) to stem loop structures, known as iron-responsive elements (IREs), found in the untranslated regions of their mRNAs. In short, when iron is depleted, IRP1 or IRP2 bind IREs; this decreases the synthesis of proteins involved in iron storage and mitochondrial metabolism (e.g. ferritin and mitochondrial aconitase) and increases the synthesis of those involved in iron uptake (e.g. transferrin receptor). It is likely that more iron-containing proteins have IREs and that other IRPs may exist. One obvious place to search is in Complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, which contains at least 6 iron-sulfur (Fe-S) subunits. Interestingly, in idiopathic Parkinson's disease, iron homeostasis is altered, and Complex I activity is diminished. These findings led us to investigate whether iron status affects the Fe-S subunits of Complex I. We found that the protein levels of the 75-kDa subunit of Complex I were modulated by levels of iron in the cell, whereas mRNA levels were minimally changed. Isolation of a clone of the 75-kDa Fe-S subunit with a more complete 5'-untranslated region sequence revealed a novel IRE-like stem loop sequence. RNA-protein gel shift assays demonstrated that a specific cytoplasmic protein bound the novel IRE and that the binding of the protein was affected by iron status. Western blot analysis and supershift assays showed that this cytosolic protein is neither IRP1 nor IRP2. In addition, ferritin IRE was able to compete for binding with this putative IRP. These results suggest that the 75-kDa Fe-S subunit of mitochondrial Complex I may be regulated by a novel IRE-IRP system.  相似文献   

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