Multiple Causes of Iron Overload In Tissues, Cells and Subcellular Compartments

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.

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 1995-1995
Author(s):  
Michael Huang ◽  
Erika Becker ◽  
Megan Whitnall ◽  
Yohan Suryo Rahmanto ◽  
Prem Ponka ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1995 Poster Board I-1017 We utilized the muscle creatine kinase conditional frataxin knockout mouse to elucidate how frataxin-deficiency alters iron metabolism. This is of significance since frataxin-deficiency leads to the neuro- and cardio-degenerative disease, Friedreich's ataxia. Using cardiac tissues, we demonstrate that frataxin-deficiency leads to down-regulation of key molecules involved in three mitochondrial utilization pathways: iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) synthesis (iron-sulfur cluster scaffold protein1/2 and the cysteine desulferase, Nfs1); mitochondrial-iron storage (mitochondrial ferritin); and heme synthesis (5-aminolevulinate dehydratase, coproporphyrinogen oxidase, hydroxymethylbilane synthase, uroporphyrinogen III synthase and ferrochelatase). This marked decrease in mitochondrial-iron utilization and resultant reduced release of heme and ISC from the mitochondrion could contribute to the excess mitochondrial-iron observed. Indeed, this effect is compounded by increased iron availability for mitochondrial uptake through: (1) transferrin receptor1 up-regulation that increases iron uptake from transferrin; (2) decreased ferroportin1 expression, limiting iron export; (3) increased expression of the heme catabolism enzyme, heme oxygenase1, and down-regulation of ferritin-H and —L, both of which likely lead to increased “free iron” for mitochondrial uptake; and (4) increased expression of the mammalian exocyst protein, Sec15l1, and the mitochondrial-iron importer, mitoferrin-2 (Mfrn2), that facilitate cellular iron uptake and mitochondrial-iron influx, respectively. This study enables construction of a model explaining the cytosolic iron-deficiency and mitochondrial-iron-loading in the absence of frataxin that is important for understanding the pathogenesis of Friedreich's ataxia. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 130 (Suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 79-79
Author(s):  
Andrew Crispin ◽  
Paul Schmidt ◽  
Dean Campagna ◽  
Chang Cao ◽  
Daniel Lichtenstein ◽  
...  

Abstract Congenital sideroblastic anemias (CSAs) are uncommon inherited diseases resulting from defects in heme biosynthesis, mitochondrial translation or mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) assembly. CSAs are characterized by pathological mitochondrial iron deposits in bone marrow erythroblasts. Recently, mutations in mitochondrialheat shock protein 70 (HSPA9), a critical chaperone involved in mitochondrial ISC assembly, have been reported as a cause of non-syndromic CSA. Human heat shock cognate protein 20 (HSCB), a highly conserved mitochondrial co-chaperone, is the primary binding partner of HSPA9. HSCB allows the transfer of nascent ISC to HSPA9 and stimulates its ATPase activity, promoting ISC transfer to target proteins. To identify novel genes responsible for CSA, we performed whole exome sequencing on more than 75 CSA probands and their family members. In one patient, a young woman, with pancytopenia characterized by a normocytic anemia with numerous bone marrow ringed sideroblasts, we identified two variants in HSCB : a paternally-inherited promoter variant (c.-134C>A) predicted to disrupt a conserved ETS transcription factor binding site, and a maternally-inherited frameshift (c.259dup, p.T87fs*27). A fibroblast cell-line derived from the proband showed a decrease in HSCB expression, but normal HSPA9 expression compared to healthy, unrelated controls. Impairment of ETS1-dependent transcriptional activation of the promoter variant was demonstrated in K562 cells transfected with an HSCB-luciferase reporter construct. K562 cells were also employed to determine if reduced expression of HSCB could result in impaired erythroid metabolism, maturation, or proliferation. K562 cells infected with shRNA directed against HSCB were deficient in multiple mitochondrial respiratory complexes, had abnormal iron metabolism and a defect of protein lipoylation, all consistent with defective ISC metabolism. In addition, both IRP1 and IRP2 expression were decreased and cell surface transferrin receptor 1 (TFR1) expression was enhanced, suggesting disturbed cellular iron metabolism. Nevertheless, cells lacking HSCB partially retained an ability to respond to iron chelation and iron overload. Cells lacking HSCB lose their ability to hemoglobinize in response to sodium butyrate treatment (Figure 1A). This defect was confirmed in vivo using a morpholino strategy in zebrafish, as fish lacking HSCB are also unable to hemoglobize (Fig 1B). We generated an Hscb conditional mouse to better elucidate the underlying pathophysiology of the disease. Heterozygous (Hscb+/-) animals have no discernable phenotype; however, null animals die prior to embryonic day E7.5. Thus, to avoid this lethality, we employed Vav-cre animals (Tg(Vav1-cre)1Graf) to evaluate the loss of HSCB specifically in the hematopoietic compartment. Hscbc/- Vav-cre+ pups are pale and growth retarded compared to control littermates and die at approximately p10 with severe pancytopenia. To assess the loss of HSCB specifically in the erythroid lineage, we bred conditional animals to EpoR-cre (Eportm1(EGFP/cre)Uk) mice. Hscbc/- EpoR-cre+ mice die at approximately E12.5 due to a complete failure of erythropoiesis (Figure 1C). Finally, temporally inducible, hematopoietic-specific deletion animals were generated by transplantation of fetal livers from Mx-Cre (Tg(Mx1-cre)1Cgn) positive Hscbc/- animals. After polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (pIpC) induction, global defects of hematopoiesis were observed in Mx-Cre+ animals, leading to their death 3-weeks post-induction from profound pancytopenia. A transient siderocytosis was seen in the peripheral blood between days 6-8 post-pIpC. Flow cytometry using FSC-TER119-CD44 gating strategy confirmed the defect in erythropoiesis. Taken together, these data demonstrate that HSCB is essential for hematopoiesis; both whole animal and in vitro cell culture models recapitulate the patient's phenotype, suggesting that the two patient mutations are likely disease-causing. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 225-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Paula Guedes Frazzon ◽  
Melissa V. Ramirez ◽  
Ujwala Warek ◽  
Janneke Balk ◽  
Jeverson Frazzon ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Christ ◽  
Lars I. Leichert ◽  
Anna Willms ◽  
Roland Lill ◽  
Ulrich Mühlenhoff

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document