Hepcidin: A Clue for a New Role for Lymphocytes.

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 1999-1999
Author(s):  
Jorge P Pinto ◽  
Vera Dias ◽  
Heinz Zoller ◽  
Pedro N Rodrigues ◽  
Helena Carmo ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1999 Poster Board I-1021 Background: Recent evidence suggests the involvement of lymphocytes in the severity of iron overload disorders, with increased severity of iron overload in Hereditary Hemochromatosis patients and in animal models with lymphocyte number deficiencies. However, no mechanism(s) has been suggested to explain these observations. The aim of this study was to analyze hepcidin expression in lymphocytes. Methods: Expression of hepcidin was analyzed by Real-time PCR in human and mouse Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes (PBLs) and in selected resting lymphocyte populations, in response to holotransferrin and ferric citrate. The effect of hepcidin in the expression of the iron exporter Ferroportin was analyzed by FACS and confocal immunofluorescence. Cellular iron traffic was analyzed by measurement of 55Fe and 125I-TF, cell proliferation assessed by BrdU incorporation and silencing of gene expression in lymphocytes performed with siRNAs. Results: Hepcidin is expressed in PBLs and is up-regulated in response to holotransferrin and ferric citrate. The response to holotransferrin was observed in CD8+ and not in CD4+ lymphocytes, a result confirmed by the failure of lymphocytes from β2-microglobulin-KO mice to respond to holotransferrin, in comparison with Bl6/J controls. Hepcidin up-regulation induced by holotransferrin decreases ferroportin expression, inducing its co-localization with the proteasome marker LMP2. Tumor Necrosis Factor-á (TNF-á) expression in PBLs increases with holotransferrin treatments. siRNA-mediated silencing of TNF-á in PBLs abrogates hepcidin up-regulation by holotransferrin and incubation of PBLs with recombinant TNF-á increases hepcidin expression, suggesting the involvement of this cytokine in the basal and holotransferrin-induced hepcidin expression in these cells. The role of hepcidin in a situation of high iron demand - lymphocyte activation and proliferation - was assessed. Hepcidin expression increases with T-lymphocyte activation and siRNA-mediated silencing of hepcidin in activated T lymphocytes causes a decrease in intracellular iron levels, by increasing ferroportin-mediated iron export. The low intracellular iron levels were associated with impaired T lymphocyte proliferation. Discussion: The ability of PBLs to increase hepcidin expression in response to ferric citrate distinguishes lymphocytes from hepatocytes and places peripheral blood lymphocyte numbers as a first line of response to increases in transferrin saturation and presence of NTBI, characteristic of iron overload disorders. The findings that hepcidin modulates ferroportin expression, intracellular iron levels and cell proliferation in lymphocytes demonstrate the importance of this protein for lymphocyte iron homeostasis. The control of the intracellular iron levels of lymphocytes confers to hepcidin a pivotal role in the postulated ability of circulating lymphocytes to function as “biological iron chelators”. Conclusion: With the demonstration, for the first time, of hepcidin synthesis by peripheral blood lymphocytes, of its regulation by elemental iron and of its involvement in T cell proliferation, the present results put forward a molecular mechanism for the described modifier role of lymphocytes in protection from iron toxicity. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

1995 ◽  
Vol 308 (1) ◽  
pp. 347-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Qin ◽  
T Inazu ◽  
H Yamamura

To determine the regulatory role of p72syk in lymphocyte activation, peripheral blood lymphocytes were treated with 10 mM hydrogen peroxide. Hydrogen peroxide induced a rapid elevation of p72syk activity (4-6-fold) and a dramatic increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of a number of cellular proteins, including phospholipase C gamma 1 (PLC gamma 1) and p72syk. Monoclonal antibodies to PLC gamma 1 co-precipitated p72syk from hydrogen peroxide-stimulated cell lysates, but not from unstimulated cell lysates. Furthermore, we observed a rise in intracellular Ca2+, corresponding to the combination of extracellular Ca2+ influx and the release from intracellular Ca2+ stores. Extracellular Ca2+ influx was necessary for the sustenance of p72syk activity, but not for the initiation of p72syk activation induced by hydrogen peroxide. Taken together, these data suggested that one possible role of p72syk was to activate PLC gamma 1, at least in part through tyrosine phosphorylation, and then to trigger calcium mobilization in pig peripheral blood lymphocytes in response to hydrogen peroxide stimulation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 1033-1039 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdullah H. Al-Assaf ◽  
Ali M. Alqahtani ◽  
Ali A. Alshatwi ◽  
Naveed A. Syed ◽  
Gowhar Shafi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaocui Li ◽  
Wei Hong ◽  
Yunlang Cai ◽  
Zhenzhen Zheng ◽  
Min An

Abstract BackgroundCSF-1 was found to be accumulated in the lesions and peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients, and CSF-1 induced THP-1-derived macrophages to polarize toward a suppressive phenotype. Researchers found that macrophages were the predominant cells in the peritoneal fluid (PF) of endometriosis patients, and the primary consensus is that the immune status in the PF of endometriosis patients exhibits a depressed state. Does the cytokine CSF-1 induce monocytes to differentiate into macrophages with a DC-SIGN+ suppressive phenotype in endometriosis?MethodsThe level of CSF-1 in control endometrium (N=11), eutopic endometrium (N=17), and ectopic (N=39) endometrium of endometriosis patients was evaluated by real-time polymerase chain reaction and in the PF of control (N=25) and endometriosis (N=35) patients by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. CSF-1 was examined by a MILLIPLEX MAP Mouse Cytokine/Chemokine Magnetic Bead Panel in an in vivo study. DC-SIGN+ suppressive macrophages were detected by immunohistochemical staining of tissues and flow cytometric analysis of the PF of control (N=25) and endometriosis (N=35) patients. The phenotypes and biological activities of the resulting macrophages derived from THP-1 cells induced by CSF-1 were compared by an in vitro coculture system with peripheral blood lymphocytes from normal subjects.Results In this study, we found the proportion of DC-SIGN+ suppressive macrophages was larger in the abdominal immune microenvironment of endometriosis patients. CSF-1 was primarily secreted from the ectopic lesions and peritoneum of mice with endometriosis. And, CSF-1 induced the polarization of macrophages toward a DC-SIGN+ suppressive phenotype; this effect was abolished by the addition of anti-CSF-1R. CSF-1 induced DC-SIGN+ macrophages, leading to a depressed status of peripheral blood lymphocytes, including a high percentage of Treg cells and a low percentage of CD8+ T cells. Similarly, blockade with anti-CSF-1R abrogated this biological effect. This is the first study on the predominant role of DC-SIGN+ suppressive macrophages in the depressed immune status of endometriosis patients.Conclusions This is the first study on the predominant role of DC-SIGN+ suppressive macrophages in the depressed immune status of endometriosis patients. Further study of the mechanism and biological activities of CSF-1-induced DC-SIGN+ suppressive macrophages will enhance our understanding of the physiology of endometriosis and indicate new directions for further study.


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