Mechanism of increased iron absorption in murine model of hereditary hemochromatosis: Increased duodenal expression of the iron transporter DMT1
- 16 March 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 96 (6) , 3143-3148
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.6.3143
Abstract
Hereditary hemochromatosis (HEI) is a common autosomal recessive disorder characterized by tissue iron deposition secondary to excessive dietary iron absorption. We recently reported that HFE, the protein defective in HEI, was physically associated with the transferrin receptor (TfR) in duodenal crypt cells and proposed that mutations in HFE attenuate the uptake of transferrin-bound iron from plasma by duodenal crypt cells, leading to up-regulation of transporters for dietary iron. sere, we tested the hypothesis that HFE-/- mice have increased duodenal expression of the divalent metal transporter (DMT1). By 4 weeks of age, the HFE-/- mice demonstrated iron loading when compared with HFE+/+ littermates, with elevated transferrin saturations (68.4% vs. 49.8%) and elevated liver iron concentrations (985 mu g/g vs. 381 mu g/g). By using Northern blot analyses, we quantitated duodenal expression of both classes of DMT1 transcripts: one containing an iron responsive element (IRE), called DMT1(IRE), and one containing no IRE, called DMT1(non-IRE). The positive control for DMT1 upregulation was a murine model of dietary iron deficiency that demonstrated greatly increased levels of duodenal DMT1(IRE) mRNA. HFE-/- mice also demonstrated an increase in duodenal DMT1(IRE) mRNA (average 7.7-fold), despite their elevated transferrin saturation and hepatic iron content. Duodenal expression of DMT1(non-IRE) was not increased, nor was hepatic expression of DMT1 increased. These data support the model for HH in which HFE mutations lead to inappropriately low crypt cell iron, with resultant stabilization of DMT1(IRE) mRNA, up-regulation of DMT1, and increased absorption of dietary iron.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hereditary hemochromatosis—sometimes having a real complex can be a good thingHepatology, 1998
- The Human Nramp2 Gene: Characterization of the Gene Structure, Alternative Splicing, Promoter Region and PolymorphismsBlood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases, 1998
- Control of iron absorptionJournal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 1996
- A novel MHC class I–like gene is mutated in patients with hereditary haemochromatosisNature Genetics, 1996
- Hemochromatosis: Genetics and PathogenesisSeminars in Liver Disease, 1996
- Identification and characterization of a second mouse Nramp geneGenomics, 1995
- Hereditary haemochromatosisEuropean Journal of Haematology, 1989
- Prevalence of Hemochromatosis among 11,065 Presumably Healthy Blood DonorsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Hereditary HemochromatosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1979
- Intestinal mucosal uptake of iron and iron retention in idiopathic haemochromatosis as evidence for a mucosal abnormalityGut, 1970