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Publication : Transferrin receptor 1 controls systemic iron homeostasis by fine-tuning hepcidin expression to hepatocellular iron load.

First Author  Fillebeen C Year  2019
Journal  Blood Volume  133
Issue  4 Pages  344-355
PubMed ID  30538134 Mgi Jnum  J:273037
Mgi Id  MGI:6284626 Doi  10.1182/blood-2018-05-850404
Citation  Fillebeen C, et al. (2019) Transferrin receptor 1 controls systemic iron homeostasis by fine-tuning hepcidin expression to hepatocellular iron load. Blood 133(4):344-355
abstractText  Transferrin receptor 1 (Tfr1) mediates uptake of circulating transferrin-bound iron to developing erythroid cells and other cell types. Its critical physiological function is highlighted by the embryonic lethal phenotype of Tfr1-knockout (Tfrc(-/-)) mice and the pathologies of several tissue-specific knockouts. We generated Tfrc(Alb-Cre) mice bearing hepatocyte-specific ablation of Tfr1 to explore implications in hepatocellular and systemic iron homeostasis. Tfrc(Alb-Cre) mice are viable and do not display any apparent liver pathology. Nevertheless, their liver iron content (LIC) is lower compared with that of control Tfrc(fl/fl) littermates as a result of the reduced capacity of Tfr1-deficient hepatocytes to internalize iron from transferrin. Even though liver Hamp messenger RNA (mRNA) and serum hepcidin levels do not differ between Tfrc(Alb-Cre) and Tfrc(fl/fl) mice, Hamp/LIC and hepcidin/LIC ratios are significantly higher in the former. Importantly, this is accompanied by modest hypoferremia and microcytosis, and it predisposes Tfrc(Alb-Cre) mice to iron-deficiency anemia. Tfrc(Alb-Cre) mice appropriately regulate Hamp expression following dietary iron manipulations or holo-transferrin injection. Holo-transferrin also triggers proper induction of Hamp mRNA, ferritin, and Tfr2 in primary Tfrc(Alb-Cre) hepatocytes. We further show that these cells can acquire (59)Fe from (59)Fe-transferrin, presumably via Tfr2. We conclude that Tfr1 is redundant for basal hepatocellular iron supply but essential for fine-tuning hepcidin responses according to the iron load of hepatocytes. Our data are consistent with an inhibitory function of Tfr1 on iron signaling to hepcidin via its interaction with Hfe. Moreover, they highlight hepatocellular Tfr1 as a link between cellular and systemic iron-regulatory pathways.
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