scholarly journals Defective Slc7a7 transport reduces systemic arginine availability compromising erythropoiesis and iron homeostasis

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Sotillo ◽  
Judith Giroud-Gerbetant ◽  
Jorge Couso ◽  
Rafael Artuch ◽  
Antonio Zorzano ◽  
...  

Slc7a7 encodes for y+LAT1, a transporter of cationic amino acid across the basolateral membrane of epithelial cells. Mutations in SLC7A7 gene give rise to Lysinuric Protein Intolerance (LPI), a rare autosomal recessive disease with wide variability of complications. Intriguingly, y+LAT1 is also involved in arginine transport in non polarized cells such as macrophages. Here we report that complete inducible Slc7a7 ablation in mouse compromises systemic arginine availability that alters proper erythropoiesis and that dysfunctional RBC generation leads to increased erythrophagocytosis, iron overload and an altered iron metabolism by macrophages. Herein, uncovering a novel mechanism that links amino acid metabolism to erythropoiesis and iron metabolism. Mechanistically, the iron exporter ferroportin-1 expression was compromised by increased plasma hepcidin causing macrophage iron accumulation. Strikingly, lysozyme M-cell-specific knockout mice failed to reproduce the total knockout alterations, while bone marrow transplantation experiments resulted in the resolution of macrophage iron overload but could not overcome erythropoietic defect. This study establishes a new crucial link between systemic arginine availability in erythropoiesis and iron homeostasis.

Author(s):  
Gianfranco Sebastio ◽  
Manuel Schiff ◽  
Hélène Ogier de Baulny

Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is an inherited aminoaciduria caused by defective cationic amino acid transport at the basolateral membrane of epithelial cells in intestine and kidney. LPI is caused by mutations in the SLC7A7 gene, which encodes the y+LAT-1 protein, the catalytic light chain subunit of a complex belonging to the heterodimeric amino acid transporter family. Symptoms usually begin after weaning with refusal of feeding, vomiting, and consequent failure to thrive. Hepatosplenomegaly, hematological anomalies, and neurological involvement including hyperammonemic coma will progressively appear. Lung involvement (specifically pulmonary alveolar proteinosis), chronic renal disease that may lead to end stage renal disease, and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis with macrophage activation all represent complications of LPI that may appear at any time from childhood to adulthood. The great variability of the clinical presentation frequently causes misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis. The basic therapy of LPI consist of a low-protein diet, low-dose citrulline supplementation, nitrogen-scavenging compounds to prevent hyperammonemia, lysine, and carnitine supplements.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 2204
Author(s):  
Simon Grootendorst ◽  
Jonathan de Wilde ◽  
Birgit van Dooijeweert ◽  
Annelies van Vuren ◽  
Wouter van Solinge ◽  
...  

Rare hereditary anemias (RHA) represent a group of disorders characterized by either impaired production of erythrocytes or decreased survival (i.e., hemolysis). In RHA, the regulation of iron metabolism and erythropoiesis is often disturbed, leading to iron overload or worsening of chronic anemia due to unavailability of iron for erythropoiesis. Whereas iron overload generally is a well-recognized complication in patients requiring regular blood transfusions, it is also a significant problem in a large proportion of patients with RHA that are not transfusion dependent. This indicates that RHA share disease-specific defects in erythroid development that are linked to intrinsic defects in iron metabolism. In this review, we discuss the key regulators involved in the interplay between iron and erythropoiesis and their importance in the spectrum of RHA.


2017 ◽  
Vol 138 (4) ◽  
pp. 183-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sintayehu Ambachew ◽  
Belete Biadgo

The prevalence of type 2 diabetes is increasing in epidemic proportions worldwide. Evidence suggests body iron overload is frequently linked and observed in patients with type 2 diabetes. Body iron metabolism is based on iron conservation and recycling by which only a part of the daily need is replaced by duodenal absorption. The principal liver-produced peptide called hepcidin plays a fundamental role in iron metabolism. It directly binds to ferroportin, the sole iron exporter, resulting in the internalization and degradation of ferroportin. However, inappropriate production of hepcidin has been shown to play a role in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus and its complications, based on the regulation and expression in iron-abundant cells. Underexpression of hepcidin results in body iron overload, which triggers the production of reactive oxygen species simultaneously thought to play a major role in diabetes pathogenesis mediated both by β-cell failure and insulin resistance. Increased hepcidin expression results in increased intracellular sequestration of iron, and is associated with the complications of type 2 diabetes. Besides, hepcidin concentrations have been linked to inflammatory cytokines, matriptase 2, and chronic hepatitis C infection, which have in turn been reported to be associated with diabetes by several approaches. Either hepcidin-targeted therapy alone or as adjunctive therapy with phlebotomy, iron chelators, or dietary iron restriction may be able to alter iron parameters in diabetic patients. Therefore, measuring hepcidin may improve differential diagnosis and the monitoring of disorders of iron metabolism.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. SCI-27-SCI-27
Author(s):  
Tracey Rouault

Abstract Abstract SCI-27 Iron metabolism is regulated in mammals to assure that adequate iron is delivered to the hematopoietic system to support erythropoiesis. In systemic iron metabolism, regulation of both iron uptake from the diet and release from erythrophagocytosing macrophages is coordinated by action of the peptide hormone, hepcidin, which inhibits activity of the iron exporter, ferroportin. In general, high expression of hepcidin diminishes duodenal iron uptake and reduces macrophage iron release, a combination observed in the anemia of chronic disease. Low expression of hepcidin, which is synthesized by hepatocytes and influenced by transferrin receptor 2, HFE, hemojuvelin and bone morphogenetic receptors, facilitates iron uptake. Mutations affecting genes in the hepcidin pathway cause hemochromatosis, characterized by systemic iron overload that affects mainly hepatocytes and cardiac myocytes, but spares the CNS. In contrast, there are several degenerative diseases of the CNS in which neuronal iron overload is prominent and may play a causal role. The underlying pathophysiologies of neuronal brain iron accumulation syndromes remain unclear, even though several causal genes have been identified, including pantothenate kinase 2 and aceruloplasminemia. In some cases, increased iron may be inaccessible, and cells may suffer from functional iron insufficiency, as we propose for animals that lack iron regulatory protein 2. It is also possible that errors in subcellular iron metabolism can lead to mitochondrial iron overload and concomitant cytosolic iron deficiency, a combination observed in Friedreich ataxia, ISCU myopathy, and the sideroblastic anemia caused by glutaredoxin 5 deficiency. In each of these diseases, mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster assembly is impaired, and it appears that normal regulation of mitochondrial iron homeostasis depends on intact iron-sulfur cluster assembly. Finally, in heme oxygenase 1 deficient animals, macrophages in the spleen and liver die upon erythrophagocytosis, and failure to normally metabolize heme leads to shift of heme iron to proximal tubules and macrophages of the kidney. Thus, treatment of “iron overload” must depend on the underlying causes, and removal of iron is appropriate in hemochromatosis, but more specific forms of therapy are needed for other forms of iron overload. 1. Ye, H. & Rouault, T. A. (2010). Human iron-sulfur cluster assembly, cellular iron homeostasis, and disease. Biochemistry 49, 4945–4956. 2. Zhang, A. S. & Enns, C. A. (2009). Molecular mechanisms of normal iron homeostasis. Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program 207–214. 3. Ye, H., Jeong, S. Y., Ghosh, M. C., Kovtunovych, G., Silvestri, L., Ortillo, D., Uchida, N., Tisdale, J., Camaschella, C. & Rouault, T. A. (2010). Glutaredoxin 5 deficiency causes sideroblastic anemia by specifically impairing heme biosynthesis and depleting cytosolic iron in human erythroblasts. J Clin Invest 120, 1749–1761. 4. Ghosh, M. C., Tong, W. H., Zhang, D., Ollivierre-Wilson, H., Singh, A., Krishna, M. C., Mitchell, J. B. & Rouault, T. A. (2008). Tempol-mediated activation of latent iron regulatory protein activity prevents symptoms of neurodegenerative disease in IRP2 knockout mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105, 12028–12033. 5. Crooks, D. R., Ghosh, M. C., Haller, R. G., Tong, W. H. & Rouault, T. A. (2010). Posttranslational stability of the heme biosynthetic enzyme ferrochelatase is dependent on iron availability and intact iron-sulfur cluster assembly machinery. Blood 115, 860–869. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2005 ◽  
Vol 289 (1) ◽  
pp. L14-L23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Funmei Yang ◽  
David J. Haile ◽  
Xinchao Wang ◽  
Lisa A. Dailey ◽  
Jacqueline G. Stonehuerner ◽  
...  

Ferroportin 1 (FPN1; aka MTP1, IREG1, and SLC40A1), which was originally identified as a basolateral iron transporter crucial for nutritional iron absorption in the intestine, is expressed in airway epithelia and upregulated when these cells are exposed to iron. Using immunofluorescence labeling and confocal microscopic imaging techniques, we demonstrate that in human and rodent lungs, FPN1 localizes subcellularly to the apical but not basolateral membrane of the airway epithelial cells. The role of airway epithelial cells in iron mobilization in the lung was studied in an in vitro model of the polarized airway epithelium. Normal human bronchial epithelial cells, grown on membrane supports until differentiated, were exposed to iron, and the efficiency and direction of iron transportation were studied. We found that these cells can efficiently take up iron across the apical but not basolateral surface in a concentration-dependent manner. Most of the iron taken up by the cells is then released into the medium within 8 h in the form of less reactive protein-bound complexes including ferritin and transferrin. Interestingly, iron release also occurred across the apical but not basolateral membrane. Our findings indicate that FPN1, depending on its subcellular location, could have distinct functions in iron homeostasis in different cells and tissues. Although it is responsible for exporting nutrient iron from enterocytes to the circulation in the intestine, it could play a role in iron detoxification in airway epithelial cells in the lung.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Weber ◽  
Anastasia Parmon ◽  
Nina Kurrle ◽  
Frank Schnütgen ◽  
Hubert Serve

Myelodysplasticsyndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are clonal hematopoietic stem cell diseases leading to an insufficient formation of functional blood cells. Disease-immanent factors as insufficient erythropoiesis and treatment-related factors as recurrent treatment with red blood cell transfusions frequently lead to systemic iron overload in MDS and AML patients. In addition, alterations of function and expression of proteins associated with iron metabolism are increasingly recognized to be pathogenetic factors and potential vulnerabilities of these diseases. Iron is known to be involved in multiple intracellular and extracellular processes. It is essential for cell metabolism as well as for cell proliferation and closely linked to the formation of reactive oxygen species. Therefore, iron can influence the course of clonal myeloid disorders, the leukemic environment and the occurrence as well as the defense of infections. Imbalances of iron homeostasis may induce cell death of normal but also of malignant cells. New potential treatment strategies utilizing the importance of the iron homeostasis include iron chelation, modulation of proteins involved in iron metabolism, induction of leukemic cell death via ferroptosis and exploitation of iron proteins for the delivery of antileukemic drugs. Here, we provide an overview of some of the latest findings about the function, the prognostic impact and potential treatment strategies of iron in patients with MDS and AML.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3579-3579
Author(s):  
Armin Schumacher ◽  
Henry Mok ◽  
Agnieszka E. Mlodnicka ◽  
Matthias W. Hentze ◽  
Martina Muckenthaler

Abstract Recent positional cloning of the radiation-induced polycythaemia (Pcm) mutation revealed a 58-bp microdeletion in the promoter region of ferroportin 1 (Fpn1), the sole cellular iron exporter identified to date. The microdeletion causes aberrant transcription initiation and results in the absence of the iron-responsive element in the 5′ untranslated region of the vast majority of Fpn1 transcripts, thereby disrupting translational regulation of Fpn1 expression. Pcm mutant mice exhibit the gamut of iron balance disorders, ranging from iron deficiency at birth to tissue iron overload by young adulthood. Consistent with the perinatal iron deficiency, Pcm pups display a microcytic, hypochromic anemia. Strikingly, the majority of young adult Pcm heterozygous animals display a transient erythropoietin (Epo)-dependent polycythemia with peak hematocrits of up to 80%, eponymous of the mutant strain. Here we report a molecular definition of the regulatory mechanisms governing the dynamic changes in iron balance in Pcm heterozygous mice between 3 and 12 weeks of age. Therein, hepatic and/or duodenal response patterns of iron transporters, such as Trfr, cybrd1 and Slc11a2, defined the transition from early postnatal iron deficiency to iron overload by 12 weeks of age. A significant delay in developmental upregulation of hepcidin (Hamp), the pivotal hormonal regulator of iron homeostasis, correlated with high levels of Fpn1 expression in hepatic Kupffer cells during postnatal development. Conversely, upon upregulation of Hamp expression at 12 weeks of age, Fpn1 expression decreased, indicative of a Hamp-mediated homeostatic loop. Aged cohorts of Pcm mice exhibited low levels of Fpn1 expression in the context of an iron-deficiency erythropoiesis and profound iron sequestration in reticuloendothelial macrophages, duodenum and other tissues. Similar to the anemia of chronic disease, these findings are consistent with decreased iron bioavailability due to sustained downregulation of Fpn1 levels by Hamp. Therefore, iron-deficiency erythropoiesis marks both the beginning and the endpoint of the hematopoietic defects in Pcm mice. However, whereas the embryonic/perinatal anemia results from primary organismal iron deficiency, adult Pcm mice develop anemia due to decreased iron bioavailability despite organismal iron overload. The polycythemia develops at the transition phase between the two disease states, governed by unimpeded Epo signaling. We conclude that regulatory alleles, such as Pcm, with highly dynamic changes in iron balance are ideally suited to interrogate the genetic circuitry regulating iron metabolism.


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