scholarly journals The relationship between plasma iron and plasma iron turnover in the rat

Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Bauer ◽  
S Stray ◽  
H Huebers ◽  
C Finch

Abstract Plasma iron turnover has been evaluated in the growing rat. Consistent data were obtained with the intravenous injection of radioiron in the form of ferrous sulfate or ferric citrate. Plasma iron turnover changed as a function of plasma iron concentration. Only part of this effect in the rat was due to the different rates of clearance of mono-and differic transferrin, the latter having a higher iron delivery rate in vivo. An additional effect was shown to relate to the rate of red cell production. With decreased production, the effect of plasma iron on plasma iron turnover was reduced, whereas with increased erythropoiesis there was an additional increment in plasma iron turnover for any increase in plasma iron. Since this effect was observed when increased iron demands were due to an increase in erythroid precursors in the marrow but not in the circulating blood, it is attributed to limitations in iron flow to the marrow. This suggests that erythroid marrow activity and the adequacy of iron supply when studied by ferrokinetic techniques can best be defined by the response curve relating plasma iron concentration to plasma iron turnover.

Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-242
Author(s):  
W Bauer ◽  
S Stray ◽  
H Huebers ◽  
C Finch

Plasma iron turnover has been evaluated in the growing rat. Consistent data were obtained with the intravenous injection of radioiron in the form of ferrous sulfate or ferric citrate. Plasma iron turnover changed as a function of plasma iron concentration. Only part of this effect in the rat was due to the different rates of clearance of mono-and differic transferrin, the latter having a higher iron delivery rate in vivo. An additional effect was shown to relate to the rate of red cell production. With decreased production, the effect of plasma iron on plasma iron turnover was reduced, whereas with increased erythropoiesis there was an additional increment in plasma iron turnover for any increase in plasma iron. Since this effect was observed when increased iron demands were due to an increase in erythroid precursors in the marrow but not in the circulating blood, it is attributed to limitations in iron flow to the marrow. This suggests that erythroid marrow activity and the adequacy of iron supply when studied by ferrokinetic techniques can best be defined by the response curve relating plasma iron concentration to plasma iron turnover.


1991 ◽  
Vol 274 (2) ◽  
pp. 601-606 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Lobreaux ◽  
J F Briat

Iron concentration and ferritin distribution have been determined in different organs of pea (Pisum sativum) during development under conditions of continuous iron supply from hydroponic cultures. No ferritin was detected in total protein extracts from roots or leaves. However, a transient iron accumulation in the roots, which corresponds to an increase in iron uptake, was observed when young fruits started to develop. Ferritin was detectable in total protein extracts of flowers and pods, and it accumulated in seeds. In seeds, the same relative amount of ferritin was detected in cotyledons and in the embryo axis. In cotyledons, ferritin and iron concentration decrease progressively during the first week of germination. Ferritin in the embryo axis was processed, and disappeared, during germination, within the first 4 days of radicle and epicotyl growth. This degradation of ferritin in vivo was marked by a shortening of a 28 kDa subunit, giving 26.5 and 25 kDa polypeptides, reminiscent of the radical damage occurring in pea seed ferritin during iron exchange in vitro [Laulhere, Laboure & Briat (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 3629-3635]. Developmental control of iron concentration and ferritin distribution in different organs of pea is discussed.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3865-3865
Author(s):  
Anne-Laure Talbot ◽  
Grant C. Bullock ◽  
Lorrie L Delehanty ◽  
Sara Gonias ◽  
Adam Goldfarb

Abstract Erythropoietin (EPO) is the main cytokine responsible for red blood cell production in the human marrow. Signal transduction through the EPO receptor consists of multiple limbs that promote the proliferation, differentiation, and survival of erythroid progenitors. Regulatory loops that modulate EPO signaling are not fully understood, but could prove critical in providing new therapeutic approaches to EPO-refractory anemias. One such poorly understood loop is the regulation of EPO-driven erythropoiesis by iron. Previously presented work has established that iron deprivation acts in a lineage specific manner to block erythroid development and inhibit the activity of aconitase, a Krebs cycle enzyme that interconverts citrate and isocitrate. In the current studies, the causal relationship between aconitase inhibition and erythroid blockade was characterized in normal donor-derived mobilized human primary hematopoietic CD34+ cells and in adult wild type C57BL/6 mice. We hypothesized that critical thresholds of aconitase activity are required for specific facets of EPO signaling during discrete phases of erythroid development. CD34+ cells in erythroid-promoting culture conditions (EPO and iron) were strongly growth inhibited in a dose-dependent manner when treated with fluoroacetate, a reversible aconitase inhibitor. Interestingly, there was no increase in overall cell death in the growth impaired cultures, providing the first evidence that growth and survival signals in primary erythroid precursors can be dissociated. Aconitase blockade also inhibited EPO-dependent erythroid maturation, with decreased glycophorin A upregulation, diminished CD34 downregulation, and a sharp decrease in globin chain protein levels after 5 days of culture. Biochemical analysis of known EPO targets showed no alterations in the phosphorylation status of STAT5, Akt and PKCalpha, effectively ruling out a role for the corresponding pathways in the impaired growth and differentiation. Moreover, intracellular ATP levels were unaffected by aconitase inhibition, and alterations in AMPK activation, an intracellular sensor of the ATP:AMP ratio, could not be detected. These results argue against energy starvation as the cause of the observed developmental defects. Cell cycle analysis using propidium iodide showed no evidence for phase-specific arrest, excluding standard checkpoint mechanisms. Delayed addition or washout of fluoroacetate at various time points during cultures identified the existence of aconitase-dependent and subsequent aconitase-independent phases of human erythroid development. To extend these studies to in vivo erythropoiesis, C57BL/6 mice underwent fluoroacetate (n=10) or saline (n=10) treatment with continuous infusion pumps at a drug dose of 4 mg/kg/day. In vivo blockade of aconitase over a two-week period resulted in an anemia characterized by a significant decrease in mean hemoglobin (11.6 vs. 14.7 g/dL, P<0.001), hematocrit (37.3 vs. 44%, P<0.001) and red cell number (7.49 vs. 9.32 × 1012 cells/liter, P<0.001). No thrombocytopenia or neutropenia was noted. Reticulocytes were diminished (6.6 vs. 7.9%, P<0.001), and mean serum EPO levels were 3 fold higher in the treated animals (533.2 vs. 172.3 pg/ml, P<0.001). Flow cytometric analysis of the marrow erythroid compartment consistently showed accumulation of cells at a Ter119-bright C71-intermediate stage (n=3 for each group). In summary, our data establish a new function for aconitase in EPO-driven erythropoiesis that is distinct from its metabolic role in cellular energy homeostasis. Sustained aconitase activity is required for the proliferation and maturation of erythroid precursors, but does not impact survival or specific cell cycle phases. Furthermore, this requirement for aconitase activity is stage specific and restricted to an early phase of EPO-dependent erythroid development. Taken together, these results suggest the existence of a new regulatory loop in which levels of aconitase activity modulate EPO-mediated growth and maturation. This novel checkpoint could provide new targets in the treatment of many disorders of red cell production.


Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
RD Propper ◽  
LN Button ◽  
DG Nathan

Recent advances in the treatment of patients with thalassemia major have centered around the removal of iron from individuals already overloaded due to repeated transfusions. In this report we present therapeutic maneuvers designed to decrease the rate of iron accumulation. We demonstrate that the persistent maintenance of hematocrits above 35% (“supertransfusion”) is not associated with an increased transfusion requirement because it produces a decrease in whole blood volume (21% +/- 2%). Supertransfusion is also associated with normalization or even prolongation of plasma iron turnover. In addition, we describe a method for obtaining units of blood from normal donors that contain primarily young red cells (“neocytes”). These cells have prolonged in vivo survival as measured by the interval between transfusions (30 +/- 2.5 days to 43 +/- 4.5 days) and 51Cr red cell survival (43.8 days versus 27.8 days). Supertransfusion with neocytes is effective in decreasing the rate of iron accumulation in thalassemia.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 852-852
Author(s):  
Daniel Hidalgo ◽  
Jacob Bejder ◽  
Ramona Pop ◽  
Kyle Gellatly ◽  
Yung Hwang ◽  
...  

Abstract Erythroid terminal differentiation (ETD) entails cell divisions coupled to decreasing cell size. The tight link between the number of cell divisions and red cell size is apparent in nutritional deficiencies or genetic variants in which fewer cycles result in larger red cells. Here we investigated novel EpoR functions, finding that EpoR signaling disrupts the relationship between cell cycle number and cell size, simultaneously promoting rapid cycling and the formation of larger red cells. EpoR is essential for erythroblast survival, but it is unclear whether it has other non-redundant functions. To address this, we developed a genetic system in which we rescue mouse Epor -/- fetal liver progenitors from apoptosis by transduction with the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-x L, and compare their ensuing differentiation with that of Epor -/- progenitors rescued with EpoR (Fig 1a). We found that the Bcl-x L survival signal, in the absence EpoR, supported formation of enucleated red cells. However, key ETD features were abnormal. First, Bcl-x L-transduced Epor -/- erythroblasts underwent slower and fewer cell cycles (Figure 1b), differentiating prematurely into enucleated red cells. Premature induction of the cyclin-dependent-kinase inhibitor p27 KIP1 was in part responsible for the fewer cycles in the absence of EpoR signaling. We confirmed that EpoR also stimulates rapid cycling in wild-type erythroblasts in vivo, using a mouse transgenic for a live-cell reporter of cell cycle speed. Second, using imaging flow cytometry, we found that Bcl-x L-transduced Epor -/- erythroblasts were smaller than EpoR-transduced Epor -/- cells (Fig 1c,d). By doubly transducing Epor -/- erythroblasts with both Bcl-x L and EpoR, we verified that EpoR absence, and not Bcl-x L overexpression, is responsible for the smaller size of Bcl-x L-transduced Epor -/- erythroblasts and reticulocytes. Bcl-x L-transduced Epor -/- erythroblasts failed to upregulate the transferrin receptor, suggesting that iron deficiency may be responsible for their smaller size. However, neither iron supplementation, nor transduction with the transferrin receptor, rescued their smaller size. Iron regulates cell size through Heme-regulated eIF2α kinase (HRI). To definitively test the role of iron and HRI, we generated mice doubly deleted for both EpoR and HRI. We then rescued both Epor -/- and Epor -/-Hri -/- -fetal liver cells in parallel, by transduction with either Bcl-x L or EpoR. In agreement with the known role of HRI as a negative regulator of erythroblast size, both Bcl-x L- transduced and EpoR-transduced erythroblasts were larger on the Epor -/-Hri -/- genetic background. However, the difference in size between Bcl-x L and EpoR-rescued erythroblasts persisted in Epor -/-Hri -/- erythroblasts and reticulocytes (Fig 1c,d), conclusively showing that EpoR signaling regulates cell size independently of the HRI pathway. EpoR promoted increased erythroblast and reticulocyte cell size in wild-type mice in vitro and in vivo, in response to Epo concentrations ranging from 10 to 10,000 mU/ml. We also evaluated the effect of Epo on red cell size in humans, in two independent studies, where healthy volunteers were administered Epo for either 3 weeks (20 IU /kg every 48 hours, 25 subjects, Study #1) or for 7 weeks (weekly Epo dosing that increased hemoglobin by 10 -15%; 24 subjects, Study #2). In a third intervention, 21 subjects participated in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover study in which 900 ml of whole blood was withdrawn from the treatment group by venipuncture. In all three studies, the increase in MCV in the treatment groups persisted long after Epo and reticulocyte levels returned to baseline (Figure 2). There was no correlation between MCV and the reticulocyte count, whose time courses were clearly divergent (r &lt; 0.1, Pearson's product-moment correlation). Further, computational simulation suggests that the extent and duration of the increase in MCV is unlikely to be the result of skewing of the circulating red cell population in favor of younger, larger red cells. Our work reveals a paradoxical EpoR-driven increase in erythroblast cycling simultaneously with increased erythroblast and red cell size. It suggests that EpoR alters the relationship between cell cycle and biomass in erythroblasts. It further suggests that hypoxia, anemia and other high-Epo syndromes are new diagnostic interpretations of increased MCV in the clinic. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 522-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank A. Oski ◽  
Harvey J. Sugerman ◽  
Leonard D. Miller

Abstract The relationship between red cell purine nucleoside phosphorylase activity and the ability of stored erythrocytes to regenerate the organic phosphate 2,3-diphosphoglycerate was evaluated in man, monkey, rabbit, dog, cat, and rat. A linear relationship was observed between the activity of this enzyme and the in vitro regeneration of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate from a solution of inosine, pyruvate, and inorganic phosphate. These studies suggest that rabbit and monkey erythrocytes respond in a manner similar to that of human erythrocytes and, therefore, might be useful experimental models for the evaluation of pharmacologic methods for the in vivo alteration of the oxygen-hemoglobin equilibrium curve.


Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-37
Author(s):  
A Rosenmund ◽  
S Gerber ◽  
H Huebers ◽  
C Finch

The regulation of iron supply to plasma was studied in male rate. Repeated exchange transfusions were first carried out with plasma from iron-deficient or iron-loaded animals. There was no recognizable effect on the amount of iron entering the plasma as evidenced by plasma iron concentration or iron absorption by recipient animals. In other studies, iron compounds having different tissue distribution were injected. Subsequent iron release was greater from reticuloendothelial cells than from other iron-loaded tissues. When requirements for transferrin iron were increased by exchange transfusion with high reticulocyte blood, within minutes there was a doubling of the rate of tissue iron donation. It was concluded from these studies that (1) iron turnover in the plasma is primarily determined by the number of tissue receptors for iron, particularly those of the erythron, (2) that the amount of iron supplied by each donor tissue is dependent on the output of other donor tissues, and (3) that a humoral mechanism regulating iron exchange is unlikely in view of the speed of response and magnitude of changes in plasma iron turnover. It is proposed that there is some direct mechanism that determines the movement of iron from donor tissues to unsaturated transferrin binding sites.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 5158-5158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yesim Aydinok ◽  
Patricia Evans ◽  
Chantal Y. Manz ◽  
John B. Porter

Abstract Abstract 5158 Objectives. Classic clinical and animal studies with deferoxamine (DFO) showed that two major chelatable pools exist in thalassemia major (TM), the first derived from hepatocytes and the second from red cell catabolism. Knowledge about the origin of chelatable iron with deferiprone (DFP) treatment, alone or when combined with DFO, is relatively limited. We hypothesized that changes in plasma iron species during chelation therapy may be proportional to the magnitude of chelatable iron pools. In this study, we have examined the relationship between urinary iron excretion (UIE), transfusional iron loading rates (ILR), liver iron concentration (LIC) and plasma concentrations of non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI) and labile plasma iron (LPI) before and after DFP therapies. Patients and methods. 12 TM patients were randomized to one year of DFP monotherapy (25mg/kg tds) or 9 to DFP at the same dose with the addition of subcutaneous DFO (40-50mg/kg), 2 nights a week (COMB). Plasma samples were taken for NTBI and LPI measurements, at baseline, at 1 week and at 52 weeks. These were obtained at 9am, which was 10hrs following the previous DFP dose, and 24h after the second of two weekly DFO doses for COMB patients. A 24h urine iron was collected at baseline, 1 week and 52 weeks of treatment. The ILR, expressed in mg/kg/day, was calculated from the blood volume transfused during the 1 year study. Results. After 1 week of treatment, there was a significant increase in NTBI from baseline in DFP and in COMB patients. A significant increase in LPI was also seen in DFP patients at this time (p=0.039). In all patients, absolute LPI levels at 1 week correlated with those of NTBI and increments in LPI also correlated with increments in NTBI from baseline to 1 week (r=0.52, p=0.002). Plasma NTBI levels at 1 week were proportional to UIE mg/kg/day)(r=0.51, p= 0.02), to LIC mg/g dry wt (r=0.54, p=0.01) and inversely proportional to the ILR (r=0.74, p=0.0001). By weighting the LIC and ILR pools equally, a combined chelatable pool index was derived: this was significantly proportional to both absolute NTBI at 1 week (r=0.72, p=0.003) and increments in NTBI from baseline. This index was also significantly correlated with UIE (p=0.66, p=0.0017) and with LPI at 1 week. Interpretation and conclusions. Urinary iron excretion with DFP (the predominant route of iron excretion with DFP) and COMB therapy is directly proportional to the LIC, as well as to plasma NTBI and LPI and is inversely proportional to the ILR. This is consistent with the existence of two major chelatable iron pools; the first being liver derived and the second derived from red cell catabolism. This latter pool appears to be larger for those patients who require less blood transfusion and who presumably have greater rates of ineffective eryrthropoiesis. The origin of chelatable iron with this form of COMB therapy, with DFO only two days a week, appears is similar to that of DFP monotherapy. Disclosures: Aydinok: Novartis: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau. Off Label Use: Deferiprone and desferrioxamine are indicated and approved for the chelation therapy of iron-overloaded patients with beta thalassemia. The combination of both agents as treatment regimen for patients with beta thalassemia is part of the investigation described in the abstract and is not approved for use. Manz:Lipomed AG: Employment. Porter:Novartis: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau.


Blood ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 409-427 ◽  
Author(s):  
THOMAS H. BOTHWELL ◽  
ARNOLD V. HURTADO ◽  
DENNIS M. DONOHUE ◽  
CLEMENT A. FINCH

Abstract Experimental and clinical studies have been performed to define more clearly the significance of the plasma iron turnover. It has been shown that the plasma iron turnover is not affected by the rate of red cell destruction and to only a limited extent by increased body stores. It does, however, reflect the degree of erythroid marrow activity and is a sensitive indicator for measuring changes in such activity. A series of 85 studies in normal subjects and in patients with various hematologic disorders were carried out to define the range of response with anemia and to assess the clinical value of the plasma iron turnover as an index of erythropoiesis. In states of marrow hyperfunction it is increased from 3 to 6 times normal and may be depressed to approximately half normal with marrow hypofunction. The plasma iron turnover is increased with marrow dyspoiesis. This increase is a measure of total erythropoiesis and does not indicate the production of viable red cells.


Blood ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 668-676 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOSE FAURA ◽  
JOSE RAMOS ◽  
CESAR REYNAFARJE ◽  
EUGENIA ENGLISH ◽  
PER FINNE ◽  
...  

Abstract Measurements were made to characterize the relationship between erythropoietin output and erythropoiesis in two groups of subjects, one moved from a sea level habitat to high altitude, and the second moved from a high altitude habitat to sea level. In the first group, there was a latent period of 6 hours followed by a rapid increase in erythropoietin, and a secondary fall to a level of approximately twice normal. The increased erythropoietin stimulus was also reflected in a shortened marrow radioiron transit time. In the second group, there was an initial unexplained rise, after which erythropoietin fell within 8 hours to undetectable amounts. Elevated erythropoietin was associated in Group I with an increased iron uptake within 24 hours of the stimulus, suggesting a direct action of erythropoietin on hemoglobin synthesis by the existing marrow population. Limitation in erythropoiesis to a rate of less than twice normal was tentatively explained by a restricted iron supply. In the second group, marrow activity continued for 3 days despite a marked fall in erythropoietin, indicating that cells in the maturation phase completed their normal development.


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