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1.
Lactoferrin (LF) is an iron-binding glycoprotein of the transferrin family, today known to have multifunctional physiological activities. In humans, under normal conditions, LF has been found in blood, mucosal secretions, gastrointestinal fluids, urine and mostly in milk and colostrum. The first pioneering immunohistochemical report about LF distribution in human tissues dated in 1978; successively, many studies have been performed to analyze the LF immunohistochemical pattern in different normal and neoplastic tissues. In this review, we present data from literature concerning the evidence of LF in tumors together with those by us obtained during more than 25 years; the immunohistochemical applications to human neoplastic tissues have been done to investigate the LF pathogenetic role as well as its activity in cancer. After a systematic analysis of LF immunoreactivity in different human districts, a possible explanation for its presence and function has been modulated for each site or tissue, according to experimental evidences obtained either by in vivo as well as by in vitro studies.  相似文献   

2.
Lactoferrin is a member of the transferrin family of iron-binding glycoproteins present in milk, mucosal secretions, and the secondary granules of neutrophils. While several physiological functions have been proposed for lactoferrin, including the regulation of intestinal iron uptake, the exact function of this protein in vivo remains to be established. To directly assess the physiological functions of lactoferrin, we have generated lactoferrin knockout (LFKO(-/-)) mice by homologous gene targeting. LFKO(-/-) mice are viable and fertile, develop normally, and display no overt abnormalities. A comparison of the iron status of suckling offspring from LFKO(-/-) intercrosses and from wild-type (WT) intercrosses showed that lactoferrin is not essential for iron delivery during the postnatal period. Further, analysis of adult mice on a basal or a high-iron diet revealed no differences in transferrin saturation or tissue iron stores between WT and LFKO(-/-) mice on either diet, although the serum iron levels were slightly elevated in LFKO-/- mice on the basal diet. Consistent with the relatively normal iron status, in situ hybridization analysis demonstrated that lactoferrin is not expressed in the postnatal or adult intestine. Collectively, these results support the conclusion that lactoferrin does not play a major role in the regulation of iron homeostasis.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Properties of the transferrin associated with rat intestinal mucosa   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The transferrin that is isolated from washed intestinal mucosal cell preparations consists partly of a fraction that has properties distinguishing it from serum transferrin. The serum transferrin contaminating mucosal preparations, even when fully saturated with iron and in the presence of proteinase inhibitors, also acquires the properties of the mucosal transferrin when the mucosa is homogenised. The mucosal transferrin is modified by a single cleavage of the polypeptide chain yielding a disulphide-linked peptide of 6550 daltons linked to the parent protein by a disulphide bridge. The amino-terminal sequence of the first 11 residues of this peptide could be aligned with both the known rat and human transferrin carboxy-terminal sequences. In both cases the sequence is preceded by a phenylalanine residue (residue 622 of human transferrin). This suggested that a mucosal chymotryptic enzyme was responsible even though rat transferrin is not susceptible to alpha-chymotrypsin if fully iron-saturated. Since transferrin mRNA is not found in the intestinal mucosa it must be imported from the serum. It remains uncertain whether the modified transferrin is present naturally and plays a role in iron absorption but these findings do indicate the eventual fate of any transferrin imported into an intestinal cell.  相似文献   

5.
The transferrins are a family of proteins that bind free iron in the blood and bodily fluids. Serum transferrins function to deliver iron to cells via a receptor-mediated endocytotic process as well as to remove toxic free iron from the blood and to provide an anti-bacterial, low-iron environment. Lactoferrins (found in bodily secretions such as milk) are only known to have an anti-bacterial function, via their ability to tightly bind free iron even at low pH, and have no known transport function. Though these proteins keep the level of free iron low, pathogenic bacteria are able to thrive by obtaining iron from their host via expression of outer membrane proteins that can bind to and remove iron from host proteins, including both serum transferrin and lactoferrin. Furthermore, even though human serum transferrin and lactoferrin are quite similar in sequence and structure, and coordinate iron in the same manner, they differ in their affinities for iron as well as their receptor binding properties: the human transferrin receptor only binds serum transferrin, and two distinct bacterial transport systems are used to capture iron from serum transferrin and lactoferrin. Comparison of the recently solved crystal structure of iron-free human serum transferrin to that of human lactoferrin provides insight into these differences.  相似文献   

6.
Three days hypoxia (0.5 atm) increased the haemoglobin and haematocrit values in rats paralleled by enhanced intestinal iron absorption. The destination of recently-absorbed iron was primarily the erythropoietic system, viz. bone marrow, spleen and red cells. Total plasma transferrin, was increased by 30%, but no significant changes in mucosal transferrin were found. No increase in labelling of mucosal transferrin by absorbed iron was observed. These results suggest that mucosal transferrin does not play a major role in the regulation of intestinal iron absorption in hypoxia.  相似文献   

7.
The ability to acquire iron from various sources has been demonstrated to be a major determinant in the pathogenesis of Neisseria meningitidis. Outside the cells, iron is bound to transferrin in serum, or to lactoferrin in mucosal secretions. Meningococci can extract iron from iron-loaded human transferrin by the TbpA/TbpB outer membrane complex. Moreover, N. meningitidis expresses the LbpA/LbpB outer membrane complex, which can extract iron from iron-loaded human lactoferrin. Iron transport through the outer membrane requires energy provided by the ExbB-ExbD-TonB complex. After transportation through the outer membrane, iron is bound by periplasmic protein FbpA and is addressed to the FbpBC inner membrane transporter. Iron-complexing compounds like citrate and pyrophosphate have been shown to support meningococcal growth ex vivo. The use of iron pyrophosphate as an iron source by N. meningitidis was previously described, but has not been investigated. Pyrophosphate was shown to participate in iron transfer from transferrin to ferritin. In this report, we investigated the use of ferric pyrophosphate as an iron source by N. meningitidis both ex vivo and in a mouse model. We showed that pyrophosphate was able to sustain N. meningitidis growth when desferal was used as an iron chelator. Addition of a pyrophosphate analogue to bacterial suspension at millimolar concentrations supported N. meningitidis survival in the mouse model. Finally, we show that pyrophosphate enabled TonB-independent ex vivo use of iron-loaded human or bovine transferrin as an iron source by N. meningitidis. Our data suggest that, in addition to acquiring iron through sophisticated systems, N. meningitidis is able to use simple strategies to acquire iron from a wide range of sources so as to sustain bacterial survival.  相似文献   

8.
H A Huebers  E Csiba  B Josephson  C A Finch 《Blut》1990,60(6):345-351
Iron absorption in the iron-deficient rat was compared with that in the normal rat to better understand the regulation of this dynamic process. It was found that: Iron uptake by the iron-deficient intestinal mucosa was prolonged as a result of slower gastric release, particularly when larger doses of iron were employed. The increased mucosal uptake of ionized iron was not the result of increased adsorption, but instead appeared related to a metabolically active uptake process, whereas the increased mucosal uptake of transferrin iron was associated with increased numbers of mucosal cell membrane transferrin receptors. Mucosal ferritin acted as an iron storage protein, but its iron uptake did not explain the lower iron absorption in the normal rat. Iron loading the mucosal cell (by presenting a large iron dose to the intestinal lumen) decreased absorption for 3 to 4 days. Iron loading of the mucosal cell from circulating plasma transferrin was proportionate to the plasma iron concentration. Mucosal iron content was the composite of iron loading from the lumen and loading from plasma transferrin versus release of iron into the body. These studies imply that an enhanced uptake-throughout mechanism causes the increased iron absorption in the iron-deficient rat. Results were consistent with the existence of a regulating mechanism for iron absorption that responds to change in mucosal cell iron, which is best reflected by mucosal ferritin.  相似文献   

9.
A safe and potent adjuvant is needed for development of mucosal vaccines against etiological agents, such as influenza virus, that enter the host at mucosal surfaces. Cytokines are potential adjuvants for mucosal vaccines because they can enhance primary and memory immune responses enough to protect against some infectious agents. For this study, we tested 26 interleukin (IL) cytokines as mucosal vaccine adjuvants and compared their abilities to induce antigen (Ag)-specific immune responses against influenza virus. In mice intranasally immunized with recombinant influenza virus hemagglutinin (rHA) plus one of the IL cytokines, IL-1 family cytokines (i.e., IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-18, and IL-33) were found to increase Ag-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) in plasma and IgA in mucosal secretions compared to those after immunization with rHA alone. In addition, high levels of both Th1- and Th2-type cytokines were observed in mice immunized with rHA plus an IL-1 family cytokine. Furthermore, mice intranasally immunized with rHA plus an IL-1 family cytokine had significant protection against a lethal influenza virus infection. Interestingly, the adjuvant effects of IL-18 and IL-33 were significantly decreased in mast cell-deficient W/W(v) mice, indicating that mast cells have an important role in induction of Ag-specific mucosal immune responses induced by IL-1 family cytokines. In summary, our results demonstrate that IL-1 family cytokines are potential mucosal vaccine adjuvants and can induce Ag-specific immune responses for protection against pathogens like influenza virus.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders, and the conformational conversion of normal cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into its pathogenic, amyloidogenic isoform (PrP(Sc)) is the essential event in the pathogenesis of these diseases. Lactoferrin (LF) is a cationic iron-binding glycoprotein belonging to the transferrin (TF) family, which accumulates in the amyloid deposits in the brain in neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease and Pick's disease. In the present study, we have examined the effects of LF on PrP(Sc) formation by using cell culture models. Bovine LF inhibited PrP(Sc) accumulation in scrapie-infected cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner, whereas TF was not inhibitory. Bioassays of LF-treated cells demonstrated prolonged incubation periods compared with non-treated cells indicating a reduction of prion infectivity. LF mediated the cell surface retention of PrP(C) by diminishing its internalization and was capable of interacting with PrP(C) in addition to PrP(Sc). Furthermore, LF partially inhibited the formation of protease-resistant PrP as determined by the protein misfolding cyclic amplification assay. Our results suggest that LF has multifunctional antiprion activities.  相似文献   

12.
HFE is a MHC class 1-like protein that is mutated in hereditary hemochromatosis. In order to elucidate the role of HFE protein on cellular iron metabolism, functional studies were carried out in human hepatoma cells (HLF) overexpressing a fusion gene of HFE and green fluorescent protein (GFP). The expression of HFE-GFP was found to be localized on cell membrane and perinuclear compartment by fluorescent microscopy. By co-immunoprecipitation and Western blotting, HFE-GFP protein formed a complex with endogenous transferrin receptor and beta(2)-microglobulin, suggesting that this fusion protein has the function of HFE reported previously. We then examined the (59)Fe uptake and release, and internalization and recycling of (125)I-labeled transferrin in order to elucidate the functional roles of HFE in the cell system. In the transfectants, HFE protein decreased the rate of transferrin receptor-dependent iron ((59)Fe) uptake by the cells, but did not change the rate of iron release, indicating that HFE protein decreased the rate of iron influx. Scatchard analysis of transferrin binding to HFE-transfected cells showed an elevation of the dissociation constant from 1.9 to 4. 3 nM transferrin, indicating that HFE protein decreased the affinity of transferrin receptor for transferrin, while the number of transferrin receptors decreased from 1.5x10(5)/cell to 1. 2x10(5)/cell. In addition, the rate of transferrin recycling, especially return from endosome to surface, was decreased in the HFE-transfected cells by pulse-chase study with (125)I-labeled transferrin. Our results strongly suggest an additional role of HFE on transferrin receptor recycling in addition to the decrease of receptor affinity, resulting in the reduced cellular iron.  相似文献   

13.
Iron is essential to life,but surprisingly little is known about how iron is managed in nonvertebrate animals.In mammals,the well-characterized transferrins bind iron and are involved in iron transport or immunity,whereas other members of the transferrin family do not have a role in iron homeostasis.In insects,the functions of transferrins are still poorly understood.The goals of this project were to identify the transferrin genes in a diverse set of insect species,resolve the evolutionary relationships among these genes,and predict which of the transferrins are likely to have a role in iron homeostasis.Our phylogenetic analysis of transferrins from 16 orders of insects and two orders of noninsect hexapods demonstrated that there are four orthologous groups of insect transferrins.Our analysis suggests that transferrin 2 arose prior to the origin of insects,and transferrins/,i,and 4 arose early in insect evolution.Primary sequence analysis of each of the insect transferrins was used to predict signal peptides,carboxyl-terminal transmembrane regions,GPI-anchors,and iron binding.Based on this analysis,we suggest that transferrins 2,and 4 are unlikely to play a major role in iron homeostasis.In contrast,the transferrin 1 orthologs are predicted to be secreted,soluble,iron-binding proteins.We conclude that transferrin 1 orthologs are the most likely to play an important role in iron homeostasis.Interestingly,it appears that the louse,aphid,and thrips lineages have lost the transferrin 1 gene and,thus,have evolved to manage iron without transferrins.  相似文献   

14.
Transferrin and specific transferrin receptors are demonstrated on the microvillous surface of syncytiotrophoblast in human immature and term placentae by immuno histological techniques with the use of light and electron microscopy. That the distribution of transferrin is limited to the materno-foetal interface supports the hypothesis that binding of maternal transferrin to trophoblast receptors is involved in the process of iron transport to the foetus. Parallel studies with baboon placentae demonstrate the presence of trophoblast receptors which bind both baboon and human transferrin, thereby putting forward an experimental model which might be used to test the biological significance of placental transferrin receptors in primates. In addition, investigation of a large number of human cell lines shows that many transformed cells, but no normal cells (such as blood lymphocytes) or cells from primary culture (such as neonatal foreskin fibroblasts), possess the ability to bind transferrin to their membranes. These findings suggest that transferrin receptors may play important biological roles in addition to that of iron transport from mother to foetus. One such role could be the limitation of iron in intervillous spaces, thus depriving iron-requiring microorganisms of iron, hence serving as a non-specific factor of resistance for placentae. Another role for foetal transferrin receptors on trophoblasts could be to bind maternal transferrin at the materno-foetal interface, thus frustrating maternal immunosurveillance. This is similar to a mechahism used by schistosomes in the host-parasite relation where host proteins are bound by the parasite to escape immunological recognition. The presence of transferrin receptors on transformed cells suggests that this mechanism might also be employed by tumour cells. Finally, in view of previous studies which show that transferrin is required by stimulated lymphocytes to pass from the G1 to the S phase of cellular replication, it is proposed that trophoblast transferrin receptors could limit the amount of transferrin in intervillous spaces and thus impede the proliferation and possible cytotoxicity of maternal activated lymphocytes at the materno-foetal interface.  相似文献   

15.
Baker EN  Baker HM 《Biochimie》2009,91(1):3-10
Lactoferrin (Lf) is widely distributed, in mammalian milks, other secretory fluids and white blood cells, and its biology is complex. The three-dimensional structure of this important protein was determined in 1987, giving the first atomic view of any member of the transferrin family. This review examines how structural knowledge has contributed to our understanding of Lf function, and what we have yet to understand. The internal structure of Lf is highly conserved, and is dedicated to binding iron, which is sequestered in two almost identical sites, one in each lobe of the molecule. The processes of iron binding and release, and the accompanying conformational changes, are well understood. Some functional properties of Lf derive from this property, both through iron scavenging, and because the structure and dynamics of Lf are altered by its iron status. On the other hand, the external structure (its molecular surface) is much more variable between different Lfs, making it more difficult to identify functionally important sites. One key feature is clear - the cationic N-terminus and associated lactoferricin domain on the N-lobe of Lf. Recent work shows that this region, in addition to its role in antibacterial activity and probable role in DNA binding, is also involved in complex formation with other proteins. Other parts of the surface are more variable and may result in functional differences between the Lfs of different species. Finally, it may be time to re-examine the importance of glycosylation, given the growing evidence that many pathogens depend on binding to glycans for pathogenesis.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Secretory immunoglobulin A: from mucosal protection to vaccine development   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Immune responses taking place in mucosal tissues are typified by secretory immunoglobulin A (S-IgA) molecules, which are assembled from proteins expressed in two cell lineages. The heavy and light chains as well as the J chain are produced in plasma cells, whereas the secretory component (SC) is associated to the immunoglobulin complex during transcytosis across the epithelial layer. S-IgA antibodies represent the predominant immunoglobulin class in external secretions, and the best defined entity providing specific immune protection for mucosal surfaces by blocking attachment of bacteria and viruses. S-IgA constitutes greater than 80% of all antibodies produced in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues in humans. The existence of a common mucosal immune system permits immunization on one mucosal surface to induce secretion of antigen-specific S-IgA at distant sites. In addition, S-IgA antibodies not only function in external secretions, but also exert their antimicrobial properties within the epithelial cell during transport across the epithelium. Passive mucosal delivery of monoclonal IgA molecules neutralizes pathogens responsible for gastrointestinal and respiratory infections. Mucosal and systemic immunity can be achieved by orally administered recombinant S-IgA molecules carrying a protective bacterial epitope within the SC polypeptide primary sequence.  相似文献   

18.
Lactoferrin and host defense.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Lactoferrin is a multifunctional member of the transferrin family of nonheme iron-binding glycoproteins. Lactoferrin is found at the mucosal surface where it functions as a prominent component of the first line of host defense against infection and inflammation. The protein is also an abundant component of the specific granules of neutrophils and can be released into the serum upon neutrophil degranulation. While the iron-binding properties were originally believed to be solely responsible for the host defense properties ascribed to lactoferrin, it is now known that other mechanisms contribute to the broad spectrum anti-infective and anti-inflammatory roles of this protein. In this article, current information on the functions and mechanism of action of lactoferrin are reviewed, with particular emphasis on the activities that contribute to this protein's role in host defense. In addition, studies demonstrating that lactoferrin inhibits allergen-induced skin inflammation in both mice and humans, most likely secondary to TNF-alpha (tumor necrosis factor alpha) production, are summarized. Collectively, these results suggest that lactoferrin functions as a key component of mammalian host defense at the mucosal surface.  相似文献   

19.
The transferrins (TF) are a family of bilobal glycoproteins that tightly bind ferric iron. Each of the homologous N- and C-lobes contains a single iron-binding site situated in a deep cleft. Human serum transferrin (hTF) serves as the iron transport protein in the blood; circulating transferrin binds to receptors on the cell surface, and the complex is internalized by endocytosis. Within the cell, a reduction in pH leads to iron release from hTF in a receptor-dependent process resulting in a large conformational change in each lobe. In the hTF N-lobe, two critical lysines facilitate this pH-dependent conformational change allowing entry of a chelator to capture the iron. In the C-lobe, the lysine pair is replaced by a triad of residues: Lys534, Arg632, and Asp634. Previous studies show that mutation of any of these triad residues to alanine results in significant retardation of iron release at both pH 7.4 and pH 5.6. In the present work, the role of the three residues is probed further by conversion to the residues observed at the equivalent positions in ovotransferrin (Q-K-L) and human lactoferrin (K-N-N) as well as a triad with an interchanged lysine and arginine (K534R/R632K). As expected, all of the constructs bind iron and associate with the receptor with nearly the same K(D) as the wild-type monoferric hTF control. However, interesting differences in the effect of the substitutions on the iron release rate in the presence and absence of the receptor at pH 5.6 are observed. Additionally, titration with KCl indicates that position 632 must have a positively charged residue to elicit a robust rate acceleration as a function of increasing salt. On the basis of these observations, a model for iron release from the hTF C-lobe is proposed. These studies provide insight into the importance of charge and geometry of the amino acids at these positions as a partial explanation for differences in behavior of individual TF family members, human serum transferrin, ovotransferrin, and lactoferrin. The studies collectively highlight important features common to both the N- and C-lobes of TF and the critical role of the receptor in iron release.  相似文献   

20.
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