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Biochemistry of nonheme iron in man. I. Iron proteins and cellular iron metabolism
Authors:A Bezkorovainy
Institution:Department of Biochemistry, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Ill.
Abstract:Total plasma iron turnover in man is about 36 mg/day. Transferrin is the iron transport protein of plasma, which can bind 2 atoms of iron per protein molecule, and which interacts with various cell types to provide them with the iron required for their metabolic and proliferative processes. All tissues contain transferrin receptors on their plasma membrane surfaces, which interact preferentially with diferric transferrin. In erythroid cells as well as certain laboratory cell lines, the removal of iron from transferrin apparently proceeds via the receptor-mediated endocytosis process. Transferrin and its receptor are recycled to the cell surface, whereas the iron remains in the cell. The mode of iron uptake in the hepatocyte, the main iron storage tissue, is less certain. The release of iron by hepatocytes, as well as by the reticuloendothelial cells, apparently proceeds nonspecifically. All tissues contain the iron storage protein ferritin, which stores iron in the ferric state, though iron must be in the ferrous state to enter and exit the ferritin molecule. Cellular cytosol also contains a small-molecular-weight ferrous iron pool, which may interact with protoporphyrin to form heme, and which apparently is the form of iron exported by hepatocytes and macrophages. In plasma, the ferrous iron is converted into the ferric form via the action of ceruloplasmin.
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