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Discovery of protein that plays a key role in the recycling of iron from blood
Scientists
working in the only lab at MIT doing hematology research have uncovered
a protein that plays a key role in the recycling of iron from blood.
Their work, described in the October 11 Journal of Clinical
Investigation, could lead to new therapies for certain inherited blood
disorders such as beta-thalassemia, a condition that causes chronic
anemia.
The team is led by Jane-Jane Chen, a principal research scientist in
the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST).
Two years ago Chen and colleagues showed that a protein,
heme-regulated eukaryotic translational initiation factor 2 ?-subunit
(eIF2-alpha) kinase, or HRI for short, keeps mice with beta-thalassemia
alive. This protein minimizes an abnormal and toxic imbalance of globin
chains, the protein base for the hemoglobin found in red blood cells.
Hemoglobin carries oxygen to our organs and carts away carbon dioxide
waste.
In the new work, the team has found that HRI also plays a key role
in the body's iron recycling process. Chen observed that this process
falters in mice lacking HRI. As a result, less iron was available for
use in the creation of new red blood cells.
A closer look
revealed that HRI influences two mechanisms in this recycling process.
First, a lack of HRI reduces levels of another protein called hepcidin.
Hepcidin, recently discovered to be the master regulator of the iron
cycle, releases iron from stores in the body and makes it available to
be processed into hemoglobin. Without hepcidin, the body retains iron,
but never puts it to work.
The team also found that HRI, which is expressed predominantly in
the precursors of red blood cells, is expressed in macrophages.
Macrophages are cells that literally reach out and grab dying red blood
cells and eat them, digesting them and releasing the iron from their
hemoglobin back into the system.
A lack of HRI causes these macrophages to lose their appetite,
gobbling down fewer red blood cells. Instead of being digested and
recycled, the red blood cells die and end up excreted through the
kidneys. The result is a net loss of iron from the body.
With this new understanding of HRI's dual role in iron
recycling-that it both keeps iron in the body and puts it to work-Chen
is conducting a search for small molecules that might modulate the HRI
signaling pathway. In turn, these compounds could potentially help
diseased precursors of red blood cells survive and boost the iron
recycling process.
"Perhaps we will find a compound that could help patients with
beta-thelassemia or other diseases where HRI plays a role," said Chen.
Such conditions include a genetic disorder called erythropoietic
protoporphyria (EPP), which causes photosensitivity and liver disease,
as well as a condition called the anemia of inflammation in which the
iron recycling process breaks down under the influence of stress,
chronic disease, aging, or cancer.
http://web.mit.edu/
http://www.news-medical.net/?id=31099
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