The inability of cells to grow in low iron correlates with increasing activity of their iron regulatory protein (IRP)
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal
- Vol. 33 (8) , 633-639
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11626-997-0114-2
Abstract
We studied the factors that determine the differing growth requirements of low-iron-tolerant (LIT) versus high-iron-dependent (HID) cells for extracellular nontransferrin iron. The growth of LIT cells HeLa and THP-1, when transferred from transferrin (5 µg/ml) medium into low-iron (5 µM ferric citrate) medium, was not significantly affected while HID cells Jiyoye and K562 showed nearly no growth. HeLa and THP-1 cells, as well as Jiyoye and K562 cells, do not produce transferrin in sufficient amounts to support their growth in low-iron medium. Surprisingly, similar rates of iron uptake in low-iron medium (0.033 and 0.032 nmol Fe/min and 106 cells) were found for LIT cells HeLa and HID cells K562. Furthermore, the intracellular iron level (4.64 nmol/106 cells) of HeLa cells grown in low-iron medium was much higher than iron levels (0.15 or 0.20 nmol/106 cells) of HeLa or K562 cells grown in transferrin medium. We demonstrated that the activity (ratio activated/total) of the iron regulatory protein (IRP) in HID cells Jiyoye and K562 increased more than twofold (from 0.32 to 0.79 and from 0.47 to 1.12, respectively) within 48 h after their transfer into low-iron medium. In the case of LIT cells HeLa and THP-1, IRP activity stayed at similar or slightly decreased levels (0.86–0.73 and 0.58–0.55, respectively). Addition of iron chelator deferoxamine (50 µM, i.e., about half-maximal growth-inhibitory dose) resulted in significantly increased activity of IRP also in HeLa and THP-1 cells. We hypothesize that the relatively higher bioavailability of nontransferrin iron in LIT cells, over that in HID cells, determines the differing responses observed under low-iron conditions.Keywords
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