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1.
The haemochromatosis protein (HFE) is an important regulator of body iron stores. In the liver, HFE is required for appropriate expression of hepcidin, a humoral mediator of iron absorption. HFE is also present in enterocytes, though its function in the intestine is unknown; it is not intrinsically required for iron absorption, but can augment iron absorption when over-expressed—independent of hepcidin regulation by the liver. In this study, an antibody was raised against rat HFE and validated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, Western blot and quenching of antibody function by the immunising peptide. The sub-cellular location of HFE in enterocytes of iron-deficient and control rats was determined by double-labelling experiments with markers for the microvillus membrane, terminal web, early endosomes, lysosomes and the transferrin receptor. Parallel studies were performed for the primary iron absorption protein, divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1). HFE co-localised exclusively with the terminal web of intestinal enterocytes. HFE expression was increased in iron deficiency, consistent with a second regulatory role for HFE in iron absorption, independent of hepcidin from the liver. DMT1 was localised primarily on the microvillus membrane, but did partially co-localise with HFE raising the possibility that the two proteins may interact to regulate iron absorption.  相似文献   

2.
Iron metabolism in mammals requires a complex and tightly regulated molecular network. The classical view of iron metabolism has been challenged over the past ten years by the discovery of several new proteins, mostly Fe (II) iron transporters, enzymes with ferro-oxydase (hephaestin or ceruloplasmin) or ferri-reductase (Dcytb) activity or regulatory proteins like HFE and hepcidin. Furthermore, a new transferrin receptor has been identified, mostly expressed in the liver, and the ability of the megalin-cubilin complex to internalise the urinary Fe (III)-transferrin complex in renal tubular cells has been highlighted. Intestinal iron absorption by mature duodenal enterocytes requires Fe (III) iron reduction by Dcytb and Fe (II) iron transport through apical membranes by the iron transporter Nramp2/DMT1. This is followed by iron transfer to the baso-lateral side, export by ferroportin and oxidation into Fe (III) by hephaestin prior to binding to plasma transferrin. Macrophages play also an important role in iron delivery to plasma transferrin through phagocytosis of senescent red blood cell, heme catabolism and recycling of iron. Iron egress from macrophages is probably also mediated by ferroportin and patients with heterozygous ferroportin mutations develop progressive iron overload in liver macrophages. Iron homeostasis at the level of the organism is based on a tight control of intestinal iron absorption and efficient recycling of iron by macrophages. Signalling between iron stores in the liver and both duodenal enterocytes and macrophages is mediated by hepcidin, a circulating peptide synthesized by the liver and secreted into the plasma. Hepcidin expression is stimulated in response to iron overload or inflammation, and down regulated by anemia and hypoxia. Hepcidin deficiency leads to iron overload and hepcidin overexpression to anemia. Hepcidin synthesis in response to iron overload seems to be controlled by the HFE molecule. Patients with hereditary hemochromatosis due to HFE mutation have impaired hepcidin synthesis and forced expression of an hepcidin transgene in HFE deficient mice prevents iron overload. These results open new therapeutic perspectives, especially with the possibility to use hepcidin or antagonists for the treatment of iron overload disorders.  相似文献   

3.
Interacting signals in the control of hepcidin expression   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
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4.
Iron homeostasis in the human body is maintained primarily through regulation of iron absorption in the duodenum. The liver peptide hepcidin plays a central role in this regulation. Additionally, expression and functional control of certain components of the cellular iron transport machinery can be influenced directly by the iron status of enterocytes. The significance of this modulation, relative to the effects of hepcidin, and the comparative effects of iron obtained directly from the diet and/or via the bloodstream are not clear. The studies described here were performed using Caco-2 cell monolayers as a model of intestinal epithelium, to compare the effects of iron supplied in physiologically relevant forms to either the apical or basolateral surfaces of the cells. Both sources of iron provoked increased cellular ferritin content, indicating iron uptake from both sides of the cells. Supply of basolateral transferrin-bound iron did not affect subsequent iron transport across the apical surface, but reduced iron transport across the basolateral membrane. In contrast, the apical iron supply led to subsequent reduction in iron transport across the apical cell membrane without altering iron export across the basolateral membrane. The apical and basolateral iron supplies also elicited distinct effects on the expression and subcellular distribution of iron transporters. These data suggest that, in addition to the effects of cellular iron status on the expression of iron transporter genes, different modes and direction of iron supply to enterocytes can elicit distinct functional effects on iron transport.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s12263-015-0463-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

5.
Both cellular iron deficiency and excess have adverse consequences. To maintain iron homeostasis, complex mechanisms have evolved to regulate cellular and extracellular iron concentrations. Extracellular iron concentrations are controlled by a peptide hormone hepcidin, which inhibits the supply of iron into plasma. Hepcidin acts by binding to and inducing the degradation of the cellular iron exporter, ferroportin, found in sites of major iron flows: duodenal enterocytes involved in iron absorption, macrophages that recycle iron from senescent erythrocytes, and hepatocytes that store iron. Hepcidin synthesis is in turn controlled by iron concentrations, hypoxia, anemia and inflammatory cytokines. The molecular mechanisms that regulate hepcidin production are only beginning to be understood, but its dysregulation is involved in the pathogenesis of a spectrum of iron disorders. Deficiency of hepcidin is the unifying cause of hereditary hemochromatoses, and excessive cytokine-stimulated hepcidin production causes hypoferremia and contributes to anemia of inflammation.  相似文献   

6.
王贺阳  李敏 《生命科学》2012,(8):767-774
铁调素(Hepcidin)是由肝细胞分泌的维持人体系统性铁平衡的核心因子,其通过改变细胞膜铁转运蛋白(ferroportin,Fpn)的表达量以调控肠黏膜细胞和巨噬细胞内铁的转出水平,从而决定机体循环铁水平并影响肝脏等主要储铁脏器的铁负荷程度。根据近年来的研究发现,影响Hepcidin表达的主要因素可以归纳为两个方面:一是机体本身对铁的需求,而由于铁本身又是Hb(hemoglobin,血红蛋白)的合成原料以及携氧成份,因此还应包括机体对Hb合成和缺氧的反应,介导因子主要包括携铁转铁蛋白(holo—transferrin,holo—Tf)、促红细胞生成素(erythropoietin,EPO)和缺氧诱导因子-1(hypoxia.inducible factor1,HIF.1);另一则是源于疾病病理过程中相关致病因素、细胞因子、激素等非铁调控因子的改变对其表达调控机制产生的影响,并通过扰乱机体铁稳态加速疾病的发展或加重病情。随着研究资料的积累,糖尿病、部分心血管疾病、酒精性或非酒精性脂肪肝等慢性疾病存在铁过负荷已是不争的事实,多种hepcidin非铁调控因子在代谢紊乱型铁过负荷综合征(sysmetabolic iron overload syndrome)发生过程中的作用受到了广泛重视。对一些常见疾病中引起hepcidin表达变化异常和铁代谢紊乱的非铁因子及其作用机制的研究进展进行综述。  相似文献   

7.
Hepcidin是肝脏特异性表达的一种小分子抗菌肽,是铁代谢的负调节激素。与炎症性贫血、遗传性血色沉着病等疾病的发病机制密切相关。证据显示,Hepcidin直接抑制肠上皮细胞铁吸收和诱导单核巨噬细胞铁滞留。同时,Hepcidin还具有广谱抗菌活性,与固有免疫密切相关。铁超载、感染、炎症及细胞因子可诱导Hepcidin表达,而贫血和缺氧则抑制其表达。Hepcidin的发现及其相关的铁离子运输机制的研究,将为铁离子吸收及分配的铁稳态调节和炎症性贫血、遗传性血色沉着病中的铁代谢障碍的分子机制探索开辟新的途径。本文就Hepcidin的分子特征、表达调控及生物学功能等方面研究进展进行综述。  相似文献   

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Our knowledge of iron homeostasis has increased steadily over the last two decades; much of this has been made possible through the study of animal models of iron-related disease. Analysis of transgenic mice with deletions or perturbations in genes known to be involved in systemic or local regulation of iron metabolism has been particularly informative. The effect of these genes on iron accumulation and hepcidin regulation is traditionally compared with wildtype mice fed a high iron diet, most often a 2% carbonyl iron diet. Recent studies have indicated that a very high iron diet could be detrimental to the health of the mice and could potentially affect homeostasis of other metals, for example zinc and copper. We analyzed mice fed a diet containing either 0.25%, 0.5%, 1% or 2% carbonyl iron for two weeks and compared them with mice on a control diet. Our results indicate that a 0.25% carbonyl iron diet is sufficient to induce maximal hepatic hepcidin response. Importantly these results also demonstrate that in a chronic setting of iron administration, the amount of excess hepatic iron may not further influence hepcidin regulation and that expression of hepcidin plateaus at lower hepatic iron levels. These studies provide further insights into the regulation of this important hormone.  相似文献   

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Ferroportin exports iron into plasma from absorptive enterocytes, erythrophagocytosing macrophages, and hepatic stores. The hormone hepcidin controls cellular iron export and plasma iron concentrations by binding to ferroportin and causing its internalization and degradation. We explored the mechanism of hepcidin-induced endocytosis of ferroportin, the key molecular event in systemic iron homeostasis. Hepcidin binding caused rapid ubiquitination of ferroportin in cell lines overexpressing ferroportin and in murine bone marrow-derived macrophages. No hepcidin-dependent ubiquitination was observed in C326S ferroportin mutant which does not bind hepcidin. Substitutions of lysines between residues 229 and 269 in the third cytoplasmic loop of ferroportin prevented hepcidin-dependent ubiquitination and endocytosis of ferroportin, and promoted cellular iron export even in the presence of hepcidin. The human ferroportin mutation K240E, previously associated with clinical iron overload, caused hepcidin resistance in vitro by interfering with ferroportin ubiquitination. Our study demonstrates that ubiquitination is the functionally relevant signal for hepcidin-induced ferroportin endocytosis.  相似文献   

12.
In healthy subjects, the rate of dietary iron absorption, as well as the amount and distribution of body iron are tightly controlled by hepcidin, the iron regulatory hormone. Disruption of systemic iron homeostasis leads to pathological conditions, ranging from anemias caused by iron deficiency or defective iron traffic, to iron overload (hemochromatosis). Other iron-related disorders are caused by misregulation of cellular iron metabolism, which results in local accumulation of the metal in mitochondria. Brain iron overload is observed in neurodegenerative disorders. Secondary hemochromatosis develops as a complication of another disease. For example, repeated blood transfusions, a standard treatment of various anemias characterized by ineffective erythropoiesis, promote transfusional siderosis, while chronic liver diseases are often associated with mild to moderate secondary iron overload. In this critical review, we discuss pathophysiological and clinical aspects of all types of iron metabolism disorders (265 references).  相似文献   

13.
BackgroundOsteoporosis is frequently accompanied by iron disorders. Calcitonin (CT) was approved as a clinical drug to treat osteoporosis. Hepcidin is a peptide hormone that is secreted by the liver and controls body iron homeostasis. Hepcidin deficiency leads to iron overload diseases. This study was aimed at investigating the effect of CT on hepatic hepcidin and the mechanism by which CT modulates hepatic hepcidin pathways and iron metabolism.MethodRT-PCR, Western blot, ELISA and siRNA were used to detect the effect of CT on iron metabolism in vivo and in vitro. In addition, the regulatory signal molecules of hepcidin were measured to explore the molecular mechanism of its regulation.ResultsThe results showed that CT strongly increased hepcidin expression and altered iron homeostasis, after mice were intraperitoneal injection of CT. In response to CT administration, BMP6 level in kidney and the serum BMP6 was increased significantly. The phosphorylation of Smad1/5/8 proteins in liver was increased at 3 h and 6 h. Moreover, the Bmp inhibitor LDN-193,189 pretreatment significantly attenuated the CT-mediated increases in phosphorylated Smad1/5/8 and Hamp1 mRNA levels. Calcitonin receptor (CTR) siRNA transfection significant suppressed the role of CT on BMP6 expression in Caki-1 cells.ConclusionOur results suggest that CT strongly induces hepcidin expression and affected iron metabolism. It will provide a new strategy for the treatment of calcium iron related diseases.  相似文献   

14.
Intestinal epithelial cells and reticuloendothelial macrophages are, respectively, involved in diet iron absorption and heme iron recycling from senescent erythrocytes, two critical processes of iron homeostasis. These cells appear to use the same transporter, ferroportin (Slc40a1), to export iron. The aim of this study was to compare the localization, expression, and regulation of ferroportin in both duodenal and macrophage cells. Using a high-affinity purified polyclonal antibody, we analyzed the localization and expression of ferroportin protein in the spleen, liver, and duodenum isolated from normal mice as well as from well-characterized mouse models of altered iron homeostasis. Ferroportin was found to be predominantly expressed in enterocytes of the duodenum, in splenic macrophages, and in liver Kupffer cells. Interestingly, the protein species detected in these cells migrated differently on SDS-PAGE. These differences in apparent molecular masses were partly explained by posttranslational complex N-linked glycosylations. In addition, in enterocytes, the transporter was mostly expressed at the basolateral membrane, whereas in bone marrow-derived macrophages, ferroportin was found predominantly localized in the intracellular vesicular compartment. However, some microdomains positive for ferroportin were also detected at the plasma membrane of macrophages. Despite these differences, we observed a parallel upregulation of ferroportin expression in tissue macrophages and enterocytes in response to iron-restricted erythropoiesis, suggesting that iron homeostasis is likely maintained through coordinate expression of the iron exporter in both intestinal and phagocytic cells. Our data also confirm a predominant regulation of ferroportin through systemic regulator(s) likely including hepcidin.  相似文献   

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Iron is an essential trace element involved in oxidation–reduction reactions, oxygen transport and storage, and energy metabolism. Iron in excess can be toxic for cells, since iron produces reactive oxygen species and is important for survival of pathogenic microbes. There is a fine-tuning in the regulation of serum iron levels, determined by intestinal absorption, macrophage iron recycling, and mobilization of hepatocyte stores versus iron utilization, primarily by erythroid cells in the bone marrow. Hepcidin is the major regulatory hormone of systemic iron homeostasis and is upregulated during inflammation. Hepcidin metabolism is altered in chronic kidney disease. Ferroportin is an iron export protein and mediates iron release into the circulation from duodenal enterocytes, splenic reticuloendothelial macrophages, and hepatocytes. Systemic iron homeostasis is controlled by the hepcidin–ferroportin axis at the sites of iron entry into the circulation. Hepcidin binds to ferroportin, induces its internalization and intracellular degradation, and thus inhibits iron absorption from enterocytes, and iron release from macrophages and hepatocytes. Recent data suggest that hepcidin, by slowing or preventing the mobilization of iron from macrophages, may promote atherosclerosis and may be associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk. This article reviews the current data regarding the molecular and cellular pathways of systemic and autocrine hepcidin production and seeks the answer to the question whether changes in hepcidin translate into clinical outcomes of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, and cardiovascular and renal end-points.

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17.
The regulation of iron absorption is of considerable interest in mammals since excretion is minimal. Recent advances in iron metabolism have expounded the molecular mechanisms by which iron absorption is attuned to the physiological demands of the body. The pinnacle was the discovery and identification of hepcidin, a hepatic antimicrobial peptide that regulates absorption to maintain iron homeostasis. While the intricacies of its expression and regulation by HFE, transferrin receptor 2 and hemojuvelin are still speculative, hepcidin responsiveness has correlated negatively with iron absorption in different models and disorders of iron metabolism. Consequently, hepcidin expression is repressed to enhance iron absorption during stimulated erythropoiesis even in situations of elevated iron stores. Animal models have been crucial to the advances in understanding iron metabolism and the present review focuses on phenylhydrazine treated and hypotransferrinaemic rodents. These, respectively, experimental and genetic models of enhanced erythropoiesis highlight the shifting focus of iron absorption regulation from the marrow to the liver.  相似文献   

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