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Publication : Exacerbation of Neonatal Hemolysis and Impaired Renal Iron Handling in Heme Oxygenase 1-Deficient Mice.

First Author  Bednarz A Year  2020
Journal  Int J Mol Sci Volume  21
Issue  20 PubMed ID  33092142
Mgi Jnum  J:304904 Mgi Id  MGI:6513711
Doi  10.3390/ijms21207754 Citation  Bednarz A, et al. (2020) Exacerbation of Neonatal Hemolysis and Impaired Renal Iron Handling in Heme Oxygenase 1-Deficient Mice. Int J Mol Sci 21(20):7754
abstractText  In most mammals, neonatal intravascular hemolysis is a benign and moderate disorder that usually does not lead to anemia. During the neonatal period, kidneys play a key role in detoxification and recirculation of iron species released from red blood cells (RBC) and filtered out by glomeruli to the primary urine. Activity of heme oxygenase 1 (HO1), a heme-degrading enzyme localized in epithelial cells of proximal tubules, seems to be of critical importance for both processes. We show that, in HO1 knockout mouse newborns, hemolysis was prolonged despite a transient state and exacerbated, which led to temporal deterioration of RBC status. In neonates lacking HO1, functioning of renal molecular machinery responsible for iron reabsorption from the primary urine (megalin/cubilin complex) and its transfer to the blood (ferroportin) was either shifted in time or impaired, respectively. Those abnormalities resulted in iron loss from the body (excreted in urine) and in iron retention in the renal epithelium. We postulate that, as a consequence of these abnormalities, a tight systemic iron balance of HO1 knockout neonates may be temporarily affected.
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