scholarly journals Down the Iron Path: Mitochondrial Iron Homeostasis and Beyond

Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 2198
Author(s):  
Jonathan V. Dietz ◽  
Jennifer L. Fox ◽  
Oleh Khalimonchuk

Cellular iron homeostasis and mitochondrial iron homeostasis are interdependent. Mitochondria must import iron to form iron–sulfur clusters and heme, and to incorporate these cofactors along with iron ions into mitochondrial proteins that support essential functions, including cellular respiration. In turn, mitochondria supply the cell with heme and enable the biogenesis of cytosolic and nuclear proteins containing iron–sulfur clusters. Impairment in cellular or mitochondrial iron homeostasis is deleterious and can result in numerous human diseases. Due to its reactivity, iron is stored and trafficked through the body, intracellularly, and within mitochondria via carefully orchestrated processes. Here, we focus on describing the processes of and components involved in mitochondrial iron trafficking and storage, as well as mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster biogenesis and heme biosynthesis. Recent findings and the most pressing topics for future research are highlighted.

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.


2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (9) ◽  
pp. 1212-1216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert B. Wilson

Friedreich ataxia is an inherited, severe, progressive neuro- and cardiodegenerative disorder for which there currently is no approved therapy. Friedreich ataxia is caused by the decreased expression and/or function of frataxin, a mitochondrial matrix protein that binds iron and is involved in the formation of iron-sulfur clusters. Decreased frataxin function leads to decreased iron-sulfur cluster formation, mitochondrial iron accumulation, cytosolic iron depletion, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Cloning of the disease gene for Friedreich ataxia and elucidation of many aspects of the biochemical defects underlying the disorder have led to several major therapeutic initiatives aimed at increasing frataxin expression, reversing mitochondrial iron accumulation, and alleviating oxidative stress. These initiatives are in preclinical and clinical development and are reviewed herein.


2020 ◽  
Vol 295 (33) ◽  
pp. 11928-11937 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiran Li ◽  
Wenjia Lou ◽  
Alexander Grevel ◽  
Lena Böttinger ◽  
Zhuqing Liang ◽  
...  

Cardiolipin (CL) is the signature phospholipid of mitochondrial membranes, where it is synthesized locally and plays an important role in mitochondrial bioenergetics. Previous studies in the yeast model have indicated that CL is required for optimal iron homeostasis, which is disrupted by a mechanism not yet determined in the yeast CL mutant, crd1Δ. This finding has implications for the severe genetic disorder, Barth syndrome (BTHS), in which CL metabolism is perturbed because of mutations in the CL-remodeling enzyme, tafazzin. Here, we investigate the effects of tafazzin deficiency on iron homeostasis in the mouse myoblast model of BTHS tafazzin knockout (TAZ-KO) cells. Similarly to CL-deficient yeast cells, TAZ-KO cells exhibited elevated sensitivity to iron, as well as to H2O2, which was alleviated by the iron chelator deferoxamine. TAZ-KO cells exhibited increased expression of the iron exporter ferroportin and decreased expression of the iron importer transferrin receptor, likely reflecting a regulatory response to elevated mitochondrial iron. Reduced activities of mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster enzymes suggested that the mechanism underlying perturbation of iron homeostasis was defective iron–sulfur biogenesis. We observed decreased levels of Yfh1/frataxin, an essential component of the iron–sulfur biogenesis machinery, in mitochondria from TAZ-KO mouse cells and in CL-deleted yeast crd1Δ cells, indicating that the role of CL in iron–sulfur biogenesis is highly conserved. Yeast crd1Δ cells exhibited decreased processing of the Yfh1 precursor upon import, which likely contributes to the iron homeostasis defects. Implications for understanding the pathogenesis of BTHS are discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 1125-1140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohsin Raza ◽  
Sankalpa Chakraborty ◽  
Monjoy Choudhury ◽  
Prahlad Ghosh ◽  
Alo Nag

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (S2) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Devin ◽  
T. Cañeque ◽  
Y.‐L. Lin ◽  
L. Mondoulet ◽  
J.‐L. Veyrune ◽  
...  

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