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Membrane transport of non-transferrin-bound iron by reticulocytes
Authors:E H Morgan
Affiliation:Department of Physiology, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, Perth.
Abstract:The transport of non-transferrin-bound iron into rabbit reticulocytes was investigated by incubating the cells in 0.27 M sucrose with iron labelled with 59Fe. In most experiments the iron was maintained in the reduced state, Fe(II), with mercaptoethanol. The iron was taken up by cytosolic, haem and stromal fractions of the cells in greater amounts than transferrin-iron. The uptake was saturable, with a Km value of approx. 0.2 microM and was competitively inhibited by Co2+, Mn2+, Ni2+ and Zn2+. It ceased when the reticulocytes matured into erythrocytes. The uptake was pH and temperature sensitive, the pH optimum being 6.5 and the activation energy for iron transport into the cytosol being approx. 80 kJ/mol. Ferric iron and Fe(II) prepared in the absence of reducing agents could also be transported into the cytosol. Sodium chloride inhibited Fe(II) uptake in a non-competitive manner. Similar degrees of inhibition was found with other salts, suggesting that this effect was due to the ionic strength of the solution. Iron chelators inhibited Fe(II) uptake by the reticulocytes, but varied in their ability to release 59Fe from the cells after it had been taken up. Several lines of evidence showed that the uptake of Fe(II) was not being mediated by transferrin. It is concluded that the reticulocyte can transport non-transferrin-bound iron into the cytosol by a carrier-mediated process and the question is raised whether the same carrier is utilized by transferrin-iron after its release from the protein.
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