scholarly journals Repression of the heavy ferritin chain increases the labile iron pool of human K562 cells

2001 ◽  
Vol 356 (2) ◽  
pp. 311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Or KAKHLON ◽  
Yosef GRUENBAUM ◽  
Z. Ioav CABANTCHIK
Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 2128-2134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abraham M. Konijn ◽  
Hava Glickstein ◽  
Boris Vaisman ◽  
Esther G. Meyron-Holtz ◽  
Itzchak N. Slotki ◽  
...  

Abstract The labile iron pool (LIP) harbors the metabolically active and regulatory forms of cellular iron. We assessed the role of intracellular ferritin in the maintenance of intracellular LIP levels. Treating K562 cells with the permeant chelator isonicotinoyl salicylaldehyde hydrazone reduced the LIP from 0.8 to 0.2 μmol/L, as monitored by the metalo-sensing probe calcein. When cells were reincubated in serum-free and chelator-free medium, the LIP partially recovered in a complex pattern. The first component of the LIP to reappear was relatively small and occurred within 1 hour, whereas the second was larger and relatively slow to occur, paralleling the decline in intracellular ferritin level (t½= 8 hours). Protease inhibitors such as leupeptin suppressed both the changes in ferritin levels and cellular LIP recovery after chelation. The changes in the LIP were also inversely reflected in the activity of iron regulatory protein (IRP). The 2 ferritin subunits, H and L, behaved qualitatively similarly in response to long-term treatments with the iron chelator deferoxamine, although L-ferritin declined more rapidly, resulting in a 4-fold higher H/L-ferritin ratio. The decline in L-ferritin, but not H-ferritin, was partially attenuated by the lysosomotrophic agent, chloroquine; on the other hand, antiproteases inhibited the degradation of both subunits to the same extent. These findings indicate that, after acute LIP depletion with fast-acting chelators, iron can be mobilized into the LIP from intracellular sources. The underlying mechanisms can be kinetically analyzed into components associated with fast release from accessible cellular sources and slow release from cytosolic ferritin via proteolysis. Because these iron forms are known to be redox-active, our studies are important for understanding the biological effects of cellular iron chelation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 356 (2) ◽  
pp. 311-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Or KAKHLON ◽  
Yosef GRUENBAUM ◽  
Z. Ioav CABANTCHIK

The role of ferritin in the modulation of the labile iron pool was examined by repressing the heavy subunit of ferritin in K562 cells transfected with an antisense construct. Repression of the heavy ferritin subunit evoked an increase in the chemical levels and pro-oxidant activity of the labile iron pool and, in turn, caused a reduced expression of transferrin receptors and increased expression of the light ferritin subunit


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 97 (9) ◽  
pp. 2863-2871 ◽  
Author(s):  
Or Kakhlon ◽  
Yosef Gruenbaum ◽  
Zvi Ioav Cabantchik

Abstract The role of ferritin expression on the labile iron pool of cells and its implications for the control of cell proliferation were assessed. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides were used as tools for modulating the expression of heavy and light ferritin subunits of K562 cells. mRNA and protein levels of each subunit were markedly reduced by 2-day treatment with antisense probes against the respective subunit. Although the combined action of antisense probes against both subunits reduced their protein expression, antisense repression of one subunit led to an increased protein expression of the other. Antisense treatment led to a rise in the steady-state labile iron pool, a rise in the production of reactive oxygen species after pro-oxidative challenges and in protein oxidation, and the down-regulation of transferrin receptors. When compared to the repression of individual subunits, co-repression of each subunit evoked a more than additive increase in the labile iron pool and the extent of protein oxidation. These treatments had no detectable effects on the long-term growth of cells. However, repression of ferritin synthesis facilitated the renewal of growth and the proliferation of cells pre-arrested at the G1/S phase. Renewed cell growth was significantly less dependent on external iron supply when ferritin synthesis was repressed and its degradation inhibited by lysosomal antiproteases. This study provides experimental evidence that links the effect of ferritin repression on growth stimulation to the expansion of the labile iron pool.


Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 2128-2134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abraham M. Konijn ◽  
Hava Glickstein ◽  
Boris Vaisman ◽  
Esther G. Meyron-Holtz ◽  
Itzchak N. Slotki ◽  
...  

The labile iron pool (LIP) harbors the metabolically active and regulatory forms of cellular iron. We assessed the role of intracellular ferritin in the maintenance of intracellular LIP levels. Treating K562 cells with the permeant chelator isonicotinoyl salicylaldehyde hydrazone reduced the LIP from 0.8 to 0.2 μmol/L, as monitored by the metalo-sensing probe calcein. When cells were reincubated in serum-free and chelator-free medium, the LIP partially recovered in a complex pattern. The first component of the LIP to reappear was relatively small and occurred within 1 hour, whereas the second was larger and relatively slow to occur, paralleling the decline in intracellular ferritin level (t½= 8 hours). Protease inhibitors such as leupeptin suppressed both the changes in ferritin levels and cellular LIP recovery after chelation. The changes in the LIP were also inversely reflected in the activity of iron regulatory protein (IRP). The 2 ferritin subunits, H and L, behaved qualitatively similarly in response to long-term treatments with the iron chelator deferoxamine, although L-ferritin declined more rapidly, resulting in a 4-fold higher H/L-ferritin ratio. The decline in L-ferritin, but not H-ferritin, was partially attenuated by the lysosomotrophic agent, chloroquine; on the other hand, antiproteases inhibited the degradation of both subunits to the same extent. These findings indicate that, after acute LIP depletion with fast-acting chelators, iron can be mobilized into the LIP from intracellular sources. The underlying mechanisms can be kinetically analyzed into components associated with fast release from accessible cellular sources and slow release from cytosolic ferritin via proteolysis. Because these iron forms are known to be redox-active, our studies are important for understanding the biological effects of cellular iron chelation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 190 (23) ◽  
pp. 7608-7613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Thorgersen ◽  
Diana M. Downs

ABSTRACT Strains of Salmonella enterica lacking YggX and the cellular reductant glutathione exhibit defects similar to those resulting from iron deficiency and oxidative stress. Mutant strains are sensitive to hydrogen peroxide and superoxide, deregulate the expression of the Fur-regulated gene entB, and fail to grow on succinate medium. Suppression of some yggX gshA mutant phenotypes by the cell-permeable iron chelator deferoxamine allowed the conclusion that increased levels of cellular Fenton chemistry played a role in the growth defects. The data presented are consistent with a scenario in which glutathione acts as a physiological chelator of the labile iron pool and in which YggX acts upstream of the labile iron pool by preventing superoxide toxicity.


2003 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Kruszewski ◽  
Teresa Iwaneńko

Labile iron pool (LIP) constitutes a crossroad of metabolic pathways of iron-containing compounds and is midway between the cellular need for iron, its uptake and storage. In this study we investigated oxidative DNA damage in relation to the labile iron pool in a pair of mouse lymphoma L5178Y (LY) sublines (LY-R and LY-S) differing in sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide. The LY-R cells, which are hydrogen peroxide-sensitive, contain 3 times more labile iron than the hydrogen peroxide-resistant LY-S cells. Using the comet assay, we compared total DNA breakage in the studied cell lines treated with hydrogen peroxide (25 microM for 30 min at 4 degrees C). More DNA damage was found in LY-R cells than in LY-S cells. We also compared the levels of DNA lesions sensitive to specific DNA repair enzymes in both cell lines treated with H(2)O(2). The levels of endonuclease III-sensitive sites and Fapy-DNA glycosylase-sensitive sites were found to be higher in LY-R cells than in LY-S cells. Our data suggest that the sensitivity of LY-R cells to H(2)O(2) is partially caused by the higher yield of oxidative DNA damage, as compared to that in LY-S cells. The critical factor appears to be the availability of transition metal ions that take part in the OH radical-generating Fenton reaction (very likely in the form of LIP).


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