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Transferrin receptors have been previously found on human macrophages and it has also been shown that transferrin iron is taken up by these cells. It has therefore been inferred that the uptake is receptor mediated and involves an endocytic pathway. The subject was addressed directly in the present study in which the transferrin-iron-receptor interaction was characterized in cultured human blood monocytes. Specific, saturable diferric transferrin binding was demonstrated, with a kDa of 3.6 X 10(-8) M and a calculated receptor density of 1.25-2.5 X 10(5) receptors per cell. Incubation at 4 degrees C markedly reduced transferrin binding and completely inhibited iron uptake. Chase experiments confirmed progressive cellular loading of iron, with concomitant loss of transferrin. Inhibitors of endocytic vesicle acidification (ammonium chloride and 2,4-dinitrophenol) inhibited iron unloading from endocytosed diferric transferrin, while microtubular inhibitors (colchicine and vindesine) and a microfilament inhibitor (cytochalasin B) reduced diferric transferrin uptake but had little effect on the iron unloading pathway. A similar effect was noted with a calcium ion antagonist (verapamil) and with 2 calmodulin antagonists (chlorpromazine and imipramine). These latter findings suggest the importance of cytoskeleton-membrane interactions via a calcium, calmodulin and protein kinase C mediated system. Endocytosed iron accumulated progressively as ferritin within the cultured monocytes.  相似文献   

4.
To investigate the regulation mechanism of the uptake of iron and heme iron by the cells and intracellular utilization of iron, we examined the interaction between iron uptake from transferrin and hemopexin-mediated uptake of heme by human leukemic U937 cells or HeLa cells. U937 cells exhibited about 40,000 hemopexin receptors/cell with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 1 nM. Heme bound in hemopexin was taken up by U937 cells or HeLa cells in a receptor-mediated manner. Treatment of both species of cells with hemopexin led to a rapid decrease in iron uptake from transferrin in a hemopexin dose-dependent manner, and the decrease seen in case of treatment with hemin was less than that seen with hemopexin. The decrease of iron uptake by hemopexin contributed to a decrease in cell surface transferrin receptors on hemopexin-treated cells. Immunoblot analysis of the transferrin receptors revealed that the cellular level of receptors in U937 cells did not vary during an 8-h incubation with hemopexin although the number of surface receptors as well as iron uptake decreased within the 2-h incubation. After 4 h of incubation of the cells with hemopexin, a decrease of the synthesis of the receptors occurred. Thus, the down-regulation of transferrin receptors by hemopexin can be attributed to at least two mechanisms. One is a rapid redistribution of the surface receptor into the interior of the cells, and the other is a decrease in the biosynthesis of the receptor. 59Fe from the internalized heme rapidly appeared in non-heme iron (ferritin) coincidently with the induction of heme oxygenase. The results suggest that iron released from heme down-regulates the expression of the transferrin receptors and iron uptake.  相似文献   

5.
Transferrin receptor 2: a new molecule in iron metabolism   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) which mediates uptake of transferrin-bound iron, is essential for life in mammals. Recently, a close homologue of human transferrin receptor 1 was cloned and called transferrin receptor 2 (TfR2). A similar molecule has been identified in the mouse. Human transferrin receptor 2 is 45% identical with transferrin receptor 1 in the extracellular domain, but contains no iron responsive element in its mRNA and is apparently not regulated by intracellular iron concentration nor by interaction with HFE. Transferrin receptor 2, like transferrin receptor 1, binds transferrin in a pH-dependent manner (but with 25 times lower affinity) and delivers iron to cells. However, transferrin receptor 2 distribution differs from transferrin receptor 1, increasing in differentiating hepatocytes and decreasing in differentiating erythroblasts. Expression of both receptors is cell cycle dependent. Mutations in the human transferrin receptor 2 gene cause iron overload disease, suggesting it has a role in iron homeostasis.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of lead on cellular iron metabolism has been investigated using human erythroleukemia (K562) cells. When the cells were cultured with 100 m Pb2+ for 48 h, the rate of cellular iron uptake from transferrin decreased to 46% of that in untreated cells. Scatchard analysis of the binding data revealed that this reduction was the result of a decrease in the number of transferrin receptors rather than an alteration in ligand-receptor affinity. The results of immunoprecipitation of transferrin receptors on the cell surface also confirmed the decreased expression of transferrin receptors by lead-treated cells. The down-regulation of transferrin receptors by treatment with lead did not result from a decrease in the total amount of the receptor, as determined by immunoblotting. Moreover, the biosynthesis of the receptor was unaffected by lead treatment. Thus, the down-regulation of surface transferrin receptors in lead-treated cells might be due to a redistribution of receptors rather than an actual loss of receptors from the cell. Using kinetic analysis, it was shown that redistribution of the receptor did not result from the alteration in the rates of transferrin receptor recycling. A comparison of the amounts of transferrin receptor on the cell surface and in the cycling pool revealed that the sequestration of the receptor from normal flow through the cycle might cause down-regulation of the surface receptor.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: Iron is essential in the cellular metabolism of all mammalian tissues, including the brain. Intracerebral iron concentrations vary with age and in several (neurological) diseases. Although it is evident that endothelial cells lining the capillaries in the brain are of importance, factors governing the regulation of intracerebral iron concentration are unknown. To investigate the role of blood-brain barrier endothelial cells in cerebral iron regulation, primary cultures of porcine blood-brain barrier endothelial cells were grown in either iron-enriched or iron-depleted medium. Iron-enriched cells showed a reduction in surface-bound and total transferrin receptor numbers compared with iron-depleted cells. Transferrin receptor kinetics showed that the transferrin receptor internalization rate in iron-enriched cultures was higher, whereas the transferrin receptor externalization rate in iron-enriched cultures was lower than the rate in iron-depleted cultures. Moreover, blood-brain barrier endothelial cells cultured in iron-enriched medium were able to accumulate more iron intracellularly, which underlines our kinetic data on transferrin receptors. Our results agree with histopathological studies on brain tissue of patients with hemochromatosis, suggesting that at high peripheral iron concentrations, the rate of iron transport across the blood-brain barrier endothelial cells is to some extent proportional to the peripheral iron concentration.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The anatomical and cellular distribution of non-haem iron, ferritin, transferrin, and the transferrin receptor have been studied in postmortem human brain and these studies, together with data on the uptake and transport of labeled iron, by the rat brain, have been used to elucidate the role of iron and other metal ions in certain neurological disorders. High levels of non-haem iron, mainly in the form of ferritin, are found in the extrapyramidal system, associated predominantly with glial cells. In contrast to non-haem iron, the density of transferrin receptors is highest in cortical and brainstem structures and appears to relate to the iron requirement of neurones for mitochondrial respiratory activity. Transferrin is synthesized within the brain by oligodendrocytes and the choroid plexus, and is present in neurones, consistent with receptor mediated uptake. The uptake of iron into the brain appears to be by a two-stage process involving initial deposition of iron in the brain capillary endothelium by serum transferrin, and subsequent transfer of iron to brain-derived transferrin and transport within the brain to sites with a high transferrin receptor density. A second, as yet unidentified mechanism, may be involved in the transfer of iron from neurones possessing transferrin receptors to sites of storage in glial cells in the extrapyramidal system. The distribution of iron and the transferrin receptor may be of relevance to iron-induced free radical formation and selective neuronal vulnerability in neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

10.
Cultured myeloid leukemia cells display transferrin receptors but decrease receptor display after differentiation induction or accumulation of intracellular iron. To determine whether regulation of transferrin receptors and ferritin were linked under these disparate conditions, serum-free and fetal bovine serum (FBS) cultures of HL60 promyelocytic leukemia cells were used to investigate relationships between transferrin receptor display and intracellular ferritin. Using 125I-transferrin binding and immunofluorescence staining for transferrin receptors, HL60 cells cultured in serum-free, transferrin-free medium expressed fewer transferrin receptors and contained increased ferritin when compared to cells cultured with FBS or transferrin supplemented, serum-free medium. When placed in medium containing transferrin, cells previously grown in transferrin-free medium rapidly re-expressed transferrin receptors and decreased their ferritin content. HL60 cells induced to differentiate into granulocytes or macrophages also decreased transferrin receptor display and increased their ferritin content. Transferrin receptor display and ferritin content in both proliferating and differentiating myeloid leukemia cells are inversely related and their regulation is closely linked. Regulation of transferrin receptor display and ferritin synthesis may be important events regulating myeloid cell growth and differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
During pregnancy, the mother is faced with an increased food demand. A good example of this increased demand is iron (Fe). Fe is needed in all growing cells. During pregnancy, the Fe transport to the fetus increases enormously. This amount can easily induce an Fe deficiency in the mother. Fe suppletion is very important for her, but not for the Fe status of the fetus, which is protected against Fe toxicity as well as deficiency. The placenta seems to be autonomous in Fe uptake. Likely there is a regulation mechanism. The human placenta is hemomonochorial. The cell layer of the fetus in contact with the maternal blood is formed by syncytiotrophoblasts. Fe is transported to the placenta by transferrin. Transferrin binds to a transferrin receptor on the trophoblast membrane and is internalized via an endocytic pathway. During this cycle, Fe is released from transferrin and the transferrin-transferrin receptor complex is recycled to the membrane. Isolated trophoblast cells from term placentas form a syncytium in vitro, and transferrin receptors are expressed. Expression depends on the number of cells in culture, culture time, the amount of Fe available, and the Fe compound. By regulation of the number of transferrin receptors, trophoblasts are able to control their Fe uptake.  相似文献   

12.
转铁蛋白受体2及其功能与相关疾病   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:3  
转铁蛋白受体2(transferrin receptor 2, TfR2) 是最近发现的一种重要铁代谢蛋白.研究显示它不仅是一种介导肝脏细胞铁摄取的主要蛋白,而且在调节小肠铁吸收方面起着极其关键的作用,是控制肝脏铁调素合成和释放的关键成分.已经证实,TfR2基因突变是遗传性血色素沉着病的重要原因之一.  相似文献   

13.
This paper describes a method for the culture of rat placental cells. The method involved separation of the basal layer from the labyrinth and sequential digestion of the cells. The cells were demonstrated not to be fibroblasts and are described in terms of their appearance under the light and electron microscopes. Transferrin and iron uptake by the cells was examined and compared with results achieved using other methods of study. The results showed that transferrin bound to receptors on the cell surface and that the transferrin, once bound, was taken into the cell. Only this internalized transferrin was capable of donating iron to the cells. The iron was accumulated within the cells and did not appear to be released to the incubation medium. The apparent dissociation constant (Ka) for transferrin was found to be 6.96 X 10(6) M-1, a value similar to that described by earlier workers. The placental cells had 3.4 X 10(11) binding sites/microgram DNA, equivalent to approximately 1 X 10(6) sites/cell. From these data, and from the rate of accumulation of iron by the cells, the receptor turnover time was estimated as being between 5 and 10 min.  相似文献   

14.
The role of the transferrin receptor in human B lymphocyte activation   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Transferrin receptors are expressed on proliferating cells and are required for their growth. Transferrin receptors can be detected after, but not before, mitogenic stimulation of normal peripheral blood T and B cells. T cells demonstrate a functional requirement for transferrin receptors in the activation process. These receptors, in turn, are induced to appear by T cell growth factor (interleukin 2). In the experiments reported here, we examined the regulation of transferrin receptor expression on activated human B cells and whether these receptors are necessary for activation to occur. Activation was assessed by studying both proliferation and immunoglobulin secretion. We determined that transferrin receptor expression on B cells is regulated by a factor contained in supernatants of mitogen-stimulated T cells (probably B cell growth factor). This expression is required for proliferation to occur, because antibody to transferrin receptor (42/6) blocks B cell proliferation. Induction of immunoglobulin secretion, however, although dependent on phytohemagglutinin-treated T cell supernatant, is not dependent on transferrin receptor expression and can occur in mitogen-stimulated cells whose proliferation has been blocked by anti-transferrin receptor antibody. These findings support a model for B cell activation in which mitogen (or antigen) delivers two concurrent but distinct signals to B cells: one, dependent on B cell growth factor and transferrin receptor expression, for proliferation; and a second, dependent on T cell-derived factors and not requiring transferrin receptors, which leads to immunoglobulin secretion.  相似文献   

15.
Incubation of human erythroleukaemia K562 cells with Al-transferrin inhibited iron uptake from 59Fe-transferrin by about 80%. The inhibition was greater than that produced by a similar quantity of Fe-transferrin. Preincubation of cells for 6 h with either Al-transferrin or Fe-transferrin diminished the number of surface transferrin receptors by about 40% compared with cells preincubated with apo-transferrin. Al-transferrin did not compete significantly with Fe-transferrin for transferrin receptors and, when cells were preincubated for 15 min instead of 6 h, the inhibitory effect of Al-transferrin on receptor expression was lost. Both forms of transferrin also decreased the level of transferrin receptor mRNA by about 50%, suggesting a common regulatory mechanism. Aluminium citrate had no effect on iron uptake or transferrin-receptor expression. AlCl3 also had no effect on transferrin-receptor expression, but at high concentration it caused an increase in iron uptake by an unknown, possibly non-specific, mechanism. Neither Al-transferrin nor AlCl3 caused a significant change in cell proliferation. It is proposed that aluminium, when bound to transferrin, inhibits iron uptake partly by down-regulating transferrin-receptor expression and partly by interfering with intracellular release of iron from transferrin.  相似文献   

16.
Transferrin receptors are expressed on proliferating cells and are required for their growth. Transferrin receptors can be detected after, but not before, mitogenic stimulation of normal peripheral blood T and B cells. In the experiments reported here we have examined the regulation of transferrin receptor expression on activated human B cells and whether or not these receptors are necessary for activation to occur. Activation was assessed by studying both proliferation and immunoglobulin secretion. We have determined that transferrin receptor expression on B cells is regulated by a factor contained in supernatants of mitogen-stimulated T cells (probably B-cell growth factor). This expression is required for proliferation to occur, since antibody to transferrin receptor (42/6) blocks B-cell proliferation. Induction of immunoglobulin secretion, however, although dependent on PHA-treated T-cell supernatant, is not dependent on transferrin receptor expression and can occur in mitogen-stimulated cells whose proliferation has been blocked by antitransferrin receptor antibody. In addition, we have demonstrated that IgM messenger RNA induction following mitogen stimulation is unaffected by antitransferrin receptor antibody. These findings support a model for B-cell activation in which mitogen (or antigen) delivers two concurrent but distinct signals to B cells: one, dependent on B-cell growth factor and transferrin receptor expression, for proliferation, and a second, dependent on T cell-derived factors and not requiring transferrin receptors, which leads to immunoglobulin secretion.  相似文献   

17.
Several aspects of iron metabolism were studied in cultured Friend erythroleukemia cells before and after induction of hemoglobin synthesis by dimethyl sulfoxide. The maximal rate of iron uptake from 59Fe-labeled transferrin, 1.5 X 10(6) atoms of Fe/cell per 30 min in uninduced cells, increased to 3 X 10(6) atoms/cell after 5 days of induction. The increase in iron uptake was not accompanied by a proportional increase in the number of transferrin receptors detected by 125I-labeled transferrin binding, suggesting a more efficient iron uptake by transferrin receptors in induced cells, with the rate of about 26 iron atoms per receptor per hour, compared to 15 atoms in uninduced cells. In agreement with this conclusion are results of the study of cellular 125I or 59Fe labeled transferrin kinetics. In the induced cells transferrin endocytosis and release proceeded with identical rates and all the endocytosed iron was retained inside the cell. On the other hand, transferrin release by uninduced cells was significantly slower and a substantial part of internalized 59Fe was released. On the basis of these results, different efficiency of iron release from internalized transferrin, accompanied by changes in cellular transferrin kinetics, is proposed as one of the factors determining the rate of iron uptake by developing erythroid cells.  相似文献   

18.
Transferrin (Tf) receptor expression is up-regulated on tumour cells. The human serum iron transport protein transferrin (Tf) can bind to many metals including gallium and cobalt. Cobalt has a positron-emitting isotope with a half-life of 18 h and would thus be a useful isotope for imaging purposes. This study has examined the stability of the Co-Tf in the presence of serum and albumin and the uptake of radioactive Co from Co-Tf by tumour cells. Dialysis of 57Co-Tf with serum or with apo-Tf resulted in loss of most 57Co from the complex. The time course of Co uptake from cells incubated with Co-Tf showed an initial rapid association with cells, then a slower rate of accumulation, that is, a similar uptake profile to that of iron. Competition and displacement experiments showed that uptake specifically occurred by interaction with Tf receptors.  相似文献   

19.
Transferrin and Transferrin Receptor Function in Brain Barrier Systems   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
1. Iron (Fe) is an essential component of virtually all types of cells and organisms. In plasma and interstitial fluids, Fe is carried by transferrin. Iron-containing transferrin has a high affinity for the transferrin receptor, which is present on all cells with a requirement for Fe. The degree of expression of transferrin receptors on most types of cells is determined by the level of Fe supply and their rate of proliferation.2. The brain, like other organs, requires Fe for metabolic processes and suffers from disturbed function when a Fe deficiency or excess occurs. Hence, the transport of Fe across brain barrier systems must be regulated. The interaction between transferrin and transferrin receptor appears to serve this function in the blood–brain, blood–CSF, and cellular–plasmalemma barriers. Transferrin is present in blood plasma and brain extracellular fluids, and the transferrin receptor is present on brain capillary endothelial cells, choroid plexus epithelial cells, neurons, and probably also glial cells.3. The rate of Fe transport from plasma to brain is developmentally regulated, peaking in the first few weeks of postnatal life in the rat, after which it decreases rapidly to low values. Two mechanisms for Fe transport across the blood–brain barrier have been proposed. One is that the Fe–transferrin complex is transported intact across the capillary wall by receptor-mediated transcytosis. In the second, Fe transport is the result of receptor-mediated endocytosis of Fe–transferrin by capillary endothelial cells, followed by release of Fe from transferrin within the cell, recycling of transferrin to the blood, and transport of Fe into the brain. Current evidence indicates that although some transcytosis of transferrin does occur, the amount is quantitatively insufficient to account for the rate of Fe transport, and the majority of Fe transport probably occurs by the second of the above mechanisms.4. An additional route of Fe and transferrin transport from the blood to the brain is via the blood–CSF barrier and from the CSF into the brain. Iron-containing transferrin is transported through the blood–CSF barrier by a mechanism that appears to be regulated by developmental stage and iron status. The transfer of transferrin from blood to CSF is higher than that of albumin, which may be due to the presence of transferrin receptors on choroid plexus epithelial cells so that transferrin can be transported across the cells by a receptor-mediated process as well as by nonselective mechanisms.5. Transferrin receptors have been detected in neurons in vivo and in cultured glial cells. Transferrin is present in the brain interstitial fluid, and it is generally assumed that Fe which transverses the blood–brain barrier is rapidly bound by brain transferrin and can then be taken up by receptor-mediated endocytosis in brain cells. The uptake of transferrin-bound Fe by neurons and glial cells is probably regulated by the number of transferrin receptors present on cells, which changes during development and in conditions with an altered iron status.6. This review focuses on the information available on the functions of transferrin and transferrin receptor with respect to Fe transport across the blood–brain and blood–CSF barriers and the cell membranes of neurons and glial cells.  相似文献   

20.
The transferrin receptor cycles rapidly between cell surface and endosomal membrane compartments. Treatment of cultured cells with epidermal growth factor (EGF) or insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) at 37 degrees C causes a rapid redistribution of transferrin receptors from an intracellular compartment to the cell surface. The effects of EGF and IGF-I on the kinetics of the cycling of the transferrin receptor in A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells were compared. The primary site of EGF action was found to be an increase in the rate of transferrin receptor exocytosis. The exocytotic rate constant was measured to be 0.11 min-1 in control cells and 0.33 min-1 in EGF-treated cells. In contrast, IGF-I was found to increase the cell surface expression of transferrin receptors by causing a small increase in the rate of exocytosis (from 0.11 to 0.17 min-1) and a decrease in the rate of endocytosis (from 0.33 to 0.24 min-1). It is concluded that the mechanisms for EGF and IGF-I action to increase the cell surface expression of the transferrin receptor are distinct. A kinetic model of the cycling of the transferrin receptor based on experimentally determined rate constants is presented. The model predicts that a consequence of IGF-I action on transferrin receptor cycling is to decrease the apparent Km for the uptake of diferric transferrin by cells. This prediction is confirmed by direct measurement of the accumulation of 59Fe-labeled diferric transferrin by A431 cells. These data demonstrate that the accumulation of iron by cultured cells is a complex function of the rate of cycling of the transferrin receptor and that this process is under acute regulation by growth factors.  相似文献   

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