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Publication : Endogenous hepcidin and its agonist mediate resistance to selected infections by clearing non-transferrin-bound iron.

First Author  Stefanova D Year  2017
Journal  Blood Volume  130
Issue  3 Pages  245-257
PubMed ID  28465342 Mgi Jnum  J:243653
Mgi Id  MGI:5909352 Doi  10.1182/blood-2017-03-772715
Citation  Stefanova D, et al. (2017) Endogenous hepcidin and its agonist mediate resistance to selected infections by clearing non-transferrin-bound iron. Blood 130(3):245-257
abstractText  The iron-regulatory hormone hepcidin is induced early in infection, causing iron sequestration in macrophages and decreased plasma iron; this is proposed to limit the replication of extracellular microbes, but could also promote infection with macrophage-tropic pathogens. The mechanisms by which hepcidin and hypoferremia modulate host defense, and the spectrum of microbes affected, are poorly understood. Using mouse models, we show that hepcidin was selectively protective against siderophilic extracellular pathogens (Yersinia enterocolitica O9) by controlling non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) rather than iron-transferrin concentration. NTBI promoted the rapid growth of siderophilic but not nonsiderophilic bacteria in mice with either genetic or iatrogenic iron overload and in human plasma. Hepcidin or iron loading did not affect other key components of innate immunity, did not indiscriminately promote intracellular infections (Mycobacterium tuberculosis), and had no effect on extracellular nonsiderophilic Y enterocolitica O8 or Staphylococcus aureus Hepcidin analogs may be useful for treatment of siderophilic infections.
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