scholarly journals The Hepcidin-Ferroportin System as a Therapeutic Target in Anemias and Iron Overload Disorders

Hematology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (1) ◽  
pp. 538-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomas Ganz ◽  
Elizabeta Nemeth

Abstract The review summarizes the current understanding of the role of hepcidin and ferroportin in normal iron homeostasis and its disorders. The various approaches to therapeutic targeting of hepcidin and ferroportin in iron-overload disorders (mainly hereditary hemochromatosis and β-thalassemia) and iron-restrictive anemias (anemias associated with infections, inflammatory disorders, and certain malignancies, anemia of chronic kidney diseases, and iron-refractory iron-deficiency anemia) are also discussed.

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 429-429
Author(s):  
Daniel F Wallace ◽  
Cameron J McDonald ◽  
Eriza S Secondes ◽  
Lesa Ostini ◽  
Gautam Rishi ◽  
...  

Abstract Iron deficiency and iron overload are common clinical conditions that impact on the health and wellbeing of up to 30% of the world’s population. Understanding mechanisms regulating iron homeostasis will provide improved strategies for treating these disorders. The liver-expressed proteins matriptase-2 (encoded by TMPRSS6), HFE and transferrin receptor 2 (TFR2) play important and opposing roles in systemic iron homeostasis by regulating expression of the iron regulatory hormone hepcidin. Mutations in TMPRSS6 lead to iron refractory iron deficiency anemia, whereas mutations in HFE and TFR2 lead to the iron overload disorder hereditary hemochromatosis. To elucidate the competing roles of these hepcidin regulators, we created mice lacking matriptase-2, Hfe and Tfr2. Tmprss6 -/-/Hfe-/-/Tfr2-/- mice had iron deficiency anemia resulting from hepatic hepcidin over-expression and activation of Smad1/5/8, indicating that matriptase-2 predominates over Hfe and Tfr2 in hepcidin regulation. Surprisingly, this anemia was more severe than in the Tmprss6-/- mice, demonstrated by more extensive alopecia, lower hematocrit and significant extramedullary erythropoiesis in the spleen. There was increased expression of erythroid-specific genes in the spleens of Tmprss6-/-/Hfe-/-/Tfr2-/- mice, consistent with the extramedullary erythropoiesis. Expression of Tfr2 but not Hfe in the spleen was increased in the Tmprss6-/- mice compared to wild type and correlated with the expression of erythroid genes, suggesting that Tfr2 is expressed in erythroid cells. Further analysis of gene expression in the bone marrow suggests that the loss of Tfr2 in the erythroid cells of Tmprss6-/-/Hfe-/-/Tfr2-/- mice causes a delay in the differentiation process leading to a more severe phenotype. In conclusion, our results indicate that Hfe and Tfr2 act upstream of matriptase-2 in hepcidin regulation or in a way that is overridden when matriptase-2 is deleted. These results indicate that inhibition of matriptase-2 would be useful in the treatment of iron overload conditions such as hereditary hemochromatosis. We have also identified a novel role for Tfr2 in erythroid differentiation that is separate from its canonical role as a regulator of iron homeostasis in the liver. This important role of Tfr2 in erythropoiesis only becomes apparent during conditions of iron restriction. Our results provide novel insights into mechanisms regulating and linking iron homeostasis and erythropoiesis. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2011 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 151-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L. McCown ◽  
Andrew J. Specht

Iron is an essential element for nearly all living organisms and disruption of iron homeostasis can lead to a number of clinical manifestations. Iron is used in the formation of both hemoglobin and myoglobin, as well as numerous enzyme systems of the body. Disorders of iron in the body include iron deficiency anemia, anemia of inflammatory disease, and iron overload. This article reviews normal iron metabolism, disease syndromes of iron imbalance, diagnostic testing, and treatment of either iron deficiency or excess. Recent advances in diagnosing iron deficiency using reticulocyte indices are reviewed.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 133 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chia-Yu Wang ◽  
Jodie L. Babitt

Abstract The liver orchestrates systemic iron balance by producing and secreting hepcidin. Known as the iron hormone, hepcidin induces degradation of the iron exporter ferroportin to control iron entry into the bloodstream from dietary sources, iron recycling macrophages, and body stores. Under physiologic conditions, hepcidin production is reduced by iron deficiency and erythropoietic drive to increase the iron supply when needed to support red blood cell production and other essential functions. Conversely, hepcidin production is induced by iron loading and inflammation to prevent the toxicity of iron excess and limit its availability to pathogens. The inability to appropriately regulate hepcidin production in response to these physiologic cues underlies genetic disorders of iron overload and deficiency, including hereditary hemochromatosis and iron-refractory iron deficiency anemia. Moreover, excess hepcidin suppression in the setting of ineffective erythropoiesis contributes to iron-loading anemias such as β-thalassemia, whereas excess hepcidin induction contributes to iron-restricted erythropoiesis and anemia in chronic inflammatory diseases. These diseases have provided key insights into understanding the mechanisms by which the liver senses plasma and tissue iron levels, the iron demand of erythrocyte precursors, and the presence of potential pathogens and, importantly, how these various signals are integrated to appropriately regulate hepcidin production. This review will focus on recent insights into how the liver senses body iron levels and coordinates this with other signals to regulate hepcidin production and systemic iron homeostasis.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 117 (2) ◽  
pp. 647-650 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Lenoir ◽  
Jean-Christophe Deschemin ◽  
Léon Kautz ◽  
Andrew J. Ramsay ◽  
Marie-Paule Roth ◽  
...  

Abstract Hepcidin is the master regulator of iron homeostasis. In the liver, iron-dependent hepcidin activation is regulated through Bmp6 and its membrane receptor hemojuvelin (Hjv), whereas, in response to iron deficiency, hepcidin repression seems to be controlled by a pathway involving the serine protease matriptase-2 (encoded by Tmprss6). To determine the relationship between Bmp6 and matriptase-2 pathways, Tmprss6−/− mice (characterized by increased hepcidin levels and anemia) and Bmp6−/− mice (exhibiting severe iron overload because of hepcidin deficiency) were intercrossed. We showed that loss of Bmp6 decreased hepcidin levels; increased hepatic iron; and, importantly, corrected hematologic abnormalities in Tmprss6−/− mice. This finding suggests that elevated hepcidin levels in patients with familial iron-refractory, iron-deficiency anemia are the result of excess signaling through the Bmp6/Hjv pathway.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. SCI-1-SCI-1
Author(s):  
Laura Silvestri ◽  
Alessia Pagani ◽  
Antonella Nai ◽  
Clara Camaschella

Abstract Iron, an essential element in mammals, is absorbed by duodenal enterocytes, enters the circulation through the iron exporter ferroportin, (FPN), circulates bound to transferrin and is uptaken through Transferrin Receptor 1. If in excess, iron is stored in macrophages and hepatocytes and released when needed. To maintain systemic iron homeostasis and to avoid the formation of "non transferrin bound iron" (NTBI), a highly reactive form which causes organ damage, the liver synthetizes hepcidin that, binding FPN, blocks iron export to the circulation. Hepcidin integrates signals from body iron, erythropoiesis and inflammatory cytokines. Defective hepcidin production causes iron overload and organ failure in Hereditary Hemochromatosis and Thalassemia; hepcidin excess leads to anemia in Iron Refractory iron Deficiency Anemia (IRIDA) and Anemia of Inflammation (AI). In hepatocytes hepcidin is under the control of the BMP-SMAD pathway, which is activated in a paracrine manner by BMP2 and BMP6 produced by liver sinusoidal endothelial cells. BMP2 maintains hepcidin basal levels, while BMP6 controls its expression in response to iron. The two ligands have different affinity for BMP type I receptors ALK2 and ALK3, suggesting two distinct branches of the hepcidin activation pathway. This possibility is consistent with the non-redundant function of BMP2 and BMP6, the different iron phenotype of hepatocyte-conditional ALK2 and ALK3 KO mice and the residual ability of BMP6 to activate hepcidin in hemochromatosis mice. Moreover ALK2, but not ALK3, is inhibited by the immunophilin FKBP12 in the absence of ligands. The BMP pathway activation depends upon the coreceptor hemojuvelin (HJV), the MHC class I protein HFE and the second transferrin receptor (TFR2). Mutations of all these proteins lead to decreased hepcidin expression in hemochromatosis. Hepcidin expression is inhibited in iron deficiency, hypoxia and when erythropoiesis is increased. Inhibitors are the liver transmembrane serine protease TMPRSS6, whose genetic inactivation causes IRIDA, and the erythroid hormone erythroferrone (ERFE), which is released by erythropoietin-stimulated erythroblasts. The mechanism of hepcidin inhibition by ERFE is unclear; still to allow ERFE function the BMP-SMAD pathway has not to be hyperactive. Intriguingly, both iron deficiency and erythropoiesis require epigenetic modifications at the hepcidin locus with HDAC3-dependent reversible loss of H3K9ac and H3K4me3. Hepcidin also acts as an antimicrobial peptide since its expression, increased by proinflammatory cytokines, such as IL6 through JAK2-STAT3 signaling, restricts iron availability for microbial growth. This first-line of defense against infections negatively influences erythropoiesis since chronic hepcidin activation causes AI. Despite persistent JAK2-STAT3 activation, inhibition of the BMP-SMAD pathway reduces hepcidin activation in AI experimental rodent models, suggesting that hepcidin activation in inflammation requires a functional BMP-SMAD pathway. Independently from hepcidin, inflammation also reduces FPN mRNA levels, favoring macrophage iron sequestration. The identification of hepcidin-ferroportin axis molecular players has translational implications. In primary and secondary iron overload hepcidin agonists (hepcidin peptides or mimics, agents that inhibit the hepcidin inhibitor TMPRSS6 and likely the ALK2-inhibitor FKBP12) and ferroportin inhibitors are potentially useful to prevent iron overload and/or to favor iron redistribution to macrophages. In case of AI, hepcidin antagonists (including anti-hepcidin, anti-HJV and anti-BMP6 monoclonal antibodies, L-enantiomeric oligonucleotides targeting hepcidin, siRNA against hepcidin, non-anticoagulant heparins, the ALK2 inhibitor momelotinib) might improve erythropoiesis increasing iron availability. The effect of some agents that have now entered the clinical phase will become apparent in the coming years. Disclosures Camaschella: vifor Pharma: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


Blood ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nupur K Das ◽  
Chesta Jain ◽  
Amanda D. Sankar ◽  
Andrew J Schwartz ◽  
Naiara Santana-Codina ◽  
...  

Intestinal iron absorption is activated during increased systemic iron demand. The best-studied example is iron-deficiency anemia, which increases intestinal iron absorption. Interestingly, the intestinal response to anemia is very similar to that of iron overload disorders, as both the conditions activate a transcriptional program that leads to a hyperabsorption of iron via the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)2a. However, pathways to selectively target intestinal-mediated iron overload remain unknown. Nuclear receptor co-activator 4 (NCOA4) is a critical cargo receptor for autophagic breakdown of ferritin (FTN) and subsequent release of iron, in a process termed ferritinophagy. Our work demonstrates that NCOA4-mediated intestinal ferritinophagy is integrated to systemic iron demand via HIF2a. To demonstrate the importance of intestinal HIF2a/ferritinophagy axis in systemic iron homeostasis, whole body and intestine-specific NCOA4-null mouse lines were generated and assessed. These analyses revealed that the intestinal and systemic response to iron deficiency was not altered following disruption of intestinal NCOA4. However, in a mouse model of hemochromatosis, ablation of intestinal NCOA4 was protective against iron overload. Therefore, NCOA4 can be selectively targeted for the management of iron overload disorders without disrupting the physiological processes involved in the response to systemic iron deficiency.


2011 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 1357-1366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clara Camaschella ◽  
Laura Silvestri

Iron is essential for human life, but toxic if present in excess. To avoid iron overload and maintain iron homeostasis, all cells are able to regulate their iron content through the post-transcriptional control of iron genes operated by the cytosolic iron regulatory proteins that interact with iron responsive elements on iron gene mRNA. At the systemic level, iron homeostasis is regulated by the liver peptide hepcidin. Disruption of these regulatory loops leads to genetic diseases characterized by iron deficiency (iron-refractory iron-deficiency anemia) or iron overload (hemochromatosis). Alterations of the same systems are also found in acquired disorders, such as iron-loading anemias characterized by ineffective erythropoiesis and anemia of chronic diseases (ACD) associated with common inflammatory conditions. In ACD, iron is present in the body, but maldistributed, being deficient for erythropoiesis, but sequestered in macrophages. Studies of the hepcidin regulation by iron and inflammatory cytokines are revealing new pathways that might become targets of new therapeutic intervention in iron disorders.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Bell ◽  
◽  
Andreas S. Rigas ◽  
Magnus K. Magnusson ◽  
Egil Ferkingstad ◽  
...  

AbstractIron is essential for many biological functions and iron deficiency and overload have major health implications. We performed a meta-analysis of three genome-wide association studies from Iceland, the UK and Denmark of blood levels of ferritin (N = 246,139), total iron binding capacity (N = 135,430), iron (N = 163,511) and transferrin saturation (N = 131,471). We found 62 independent sequence variants associating with iron homeostasis parameters at 56 loci, including 46 novel loci. Variants at DUOX2, F5, SLC11A2 and TMPRSS6 associate with iron deficiency anemia, while variants at TF, HFE, TFR2 and TMPRSS6 associate with iron overload. A HBS1L-MYB intergenic region variant associates both with increased risk of iron overload and reduced risk of iron deficiency anemia. The DUOX2 missense variant is present in 14% of the population, associates with all iron homeostasis biomarkers, and increases the risk of iron deficiency anemia by 29%. The associations implicate proteins contributing to the main physiological processes involved in iron homeostasis: iron sensing and storage, inflammation, absorption of iron from the gut, iron recycling, erythropoiesis and bleeding/menstruation.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 117 (17) ◽  
pp. 4590-4599 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin E. Finberg ◽  
Rebecca L. Whittlesey ◽  
Nancy C. Andrews

Abstract The hereditary hemochromatosis protein HFE promotes the expression of hepcidin, a circulating hormone produced by the liver that inhibits dietary iron absorption and macrophage iron release. HFE mutations are associated with impaired hepatic bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)/SMAD signaling for hepcidin production. TMPRSS6, a transmembrane serine protease mutated in iron-refractory iron deficiency anemia, inhibits hepcidin expression by dampening BMP/SMAD signaling. In the present study, we used genetic approaches in mice to examine the relationship between Hfe and Tmprss6 in the regulation of systemic iron homeostasis. Heterozygous loss of Tmprss6 in Hfe−/− mice reduced systemic iron overload, whereas homozygous loss caused systemic iron deficiency and elevated hepatic expression of hepcidin and other Bmp/Smad target genes. In contrast, neither genetic loss of Hfe nor hepatic Hfe overexpression modulated the hepcidin elevation and systemic iron deficiency of Tmprss6−/− mice. These results indicate that genetic loss of Tmprss6 increases Bmp/Smad signaling in an Hfe-independent manner that can restore Bmp/Smad signaling in Hfe−/− mice. Furthermore, these results suggest that natural genetic variation in the human ortholog TMPRSS6 might modify the clinical penetrance of HFE-associated hereditary hemochromatosis, raising the possibility that pharmacologic inhibition of TMPRSS6 could attenuate iron loading in this disorder.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 5286-5286
Author(s):  
Rekha Athiyarath ◽  
Kalaiselvi Sakthivel ◽  
Vinod J Abraham ◽  
Daisy Singh ◽  
Alok Srivastava ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 5286 Iron homeostasis during pregnancy is modulated to meet the increased iron needs but how this is achieved is not very clear. Growth Differentiation Factor (GDF15) produced by the expanded erythroid compartment in β thalassemia has been shown to increase iron absorption by suppressing hepcidin. GDF15 is also highly expressed in the placenta and increasing levels of GDF15 are seen with advancing gestational age of pregnancy. But the role of GDF15 in iron homeostasis in pregnancy has not been elucidated till date. Ferroportin (FPN) is the only known protein involved in iron export and it is the target of hepcidin, the central regulator of iron homeostasis. In this study we analyzed the expression of GDF15 and FPN in pregnant women with iron deficiency anemia. Fourteen pregnant women with proven iron deficiency anemia (IDAP) [Hb<11g/dL and Ferritin <12ng/ul] and thirteen healthy subjects as controls (NC) were enrolled as part of an ongoing study. Serum GDF15 and hepcidin levels were measured by ELISA kits from R&D systems and Bachem, UK respectively. Reticulocytes were isolated and total RNA was purified using Trizol. GDF15 and FPN transcripts were quantified using Taqman Gene expression assays using GAPDH as an internal control. Gene expression values were calculated on the basis of the 2-ΔΔCt method. The mean age of the pregnant women was 22.5±2.5 years. The median ferritin in IDAP was 1.4 and ranged from 0.2 to 8.3 ng/ml. The hepcidin levels were very low [<2ng/ml] in IDAP. Serum GDF15 levels in IDAP was significantly higher as compared to controls [IDAP-3333.71±409 pg/ml vs. NC-309.7±127.0 pg/ml; p=0.000]. Reticulocyte GDF15 mRNA expression was significantly lower [IDAP-25.09 (1.28–239.8) vs. NC-910.4 (0.28–1962); p=0.004] and FPN expression was significantly higher in pregnancy [IDAP-209.8 (48.33–1201) vs. NC-77.96(17.21–281.3); p=0.001] than in the controls. GDF15 mRNA as well as serum GDF15 levels significantly correlated with FPN expression in IDAP [RNA r=0.895; p=0.000; Protein r=0.555, p=0.049] Eight patients were followed up after 8 weeks of supplementation and there was no significant change in the serum GDF15 concentration (3235±468.26pg/ml; p=1.000). However their serum ferritin and hepcidin levels were significantly higher [Ferritin-11.60 (9.80–21.30), p=0.0021; Hepcidin-17.86(0.29–38.50), p=0.015]. There was no significant correlation between GDF15 protein levels and hepcidin (r=0.429, p=0.354). Molecular mechanisms of iron homeostasis in pregnancy are poorly understood. IDAP had very low hepcidin levels which normalized after iron stores were replenished. Elevated GDF15 protein levels in IDAP inspite of low reticulocyte expression indicate that erythroid contribution is minimal and placenta is the main source of GDF15. The significant correlation between GDF15 (mRNA and protein) with FPN expression and absence of correlation with hepcidin levels indicate a possible role for GDF15 in iron homeostasis in pregnancy. These findings has to be validated and the role of GDF15 in modulating FPN and there by iron absorption has to be further elucidated. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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