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Review
. 2012 Sep;1823(9):1434-43.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2012.01.014. Epub 2012 Jan 26.

Hepcidin and iron homeostasis

Affiliations
Review

Hepcidin and iron homeostasis

Tomas Ganz et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2012 Sep.

Abstract

Despite fluctuations in dietary iron intake and intermittent losses through bleeding, the plasma iron concentrations in humans remain stable at 10-30 μM. While most of the iron entering blood plasma comes from recycling, appropriate amount of iron is absorbed from the diet to compensate for losses and maintain nontoxic amounts in stores. Plasma iron concentration and iron distribution are similarly regulated in laboratory rodents. The hepatic peptide hepcidin was identified as the systemic iron-regulatory hormone. In the efferent arc, hepcidin regulates intestinal iron absorption, plasma iron concentrations, and tissue iron distribution by inducing degradation of its receptor, the cellular iron exporter ferroportin. Ferroportin exports iron into plasma from absorptive enterocytes, from macrophages that recycle the iron of senescent erythrocytes, and from hepatocytes that store iron VSports手机版. In the more complex and less well understood afferent arc, hepatic hepcidin synthesis is transcriptionally regulated by extracellular and intracellular iron concentrations through a molecular complex of bone morphogenetic protein receptors and their iron-specific ligands, modulators and iron sensors. Through as yet undefined pathways, hepcidin is also homeostatically regulated by the iron requirements of erythroid precursors for hemoglobin synthesis. In accordance with the role of hepcidin-mediated iron redistribution in host defense, hepcidin production is regulated by inflammation as well. Increased hepcidin concentrations in plasma are pathogenic in iron-restrictive anemias including anemias associated with inflammation, chronic kidney disease and some cancers. Hepcidin deficiency causes iron overload in hereditary hemochromatosis and ineffective erythropoiesis. Hepcidin, ferroportin and their regulators represent potential targets for the diagnosis and treatment of iron disorders and anemias. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Cell Biology of Metals. .

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Hepcidin has a central role in maintenance of iron homeostasis
Hepcidin synthesis is regulated at the transcriptional level by multiple stimuli. Intracellular and extracellular iron concentrations increase hepcidin transcription, as does inflammation, whereas increased erythropoietic activity suppresses hepcidin production. In turn, hepcidin regulates plasma iron concentrations by controlling ferroportin concentrations on iron-exporting cells including duodenal enterocytes, recycling macrophages of the spleen and liver, and hepatocytes.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Current understanding of molecular mechanisms of hepcidin regulation
The iron-regulated pathway and the inflammatory pathway are the two well-studied regulators of hepcidin. The erythroid regulator pathway (not shown here) also exerts a strong effect on hepcidin expression but its molecular components are not yet known. In the iron-regulated pathway, extracellular iron in the form of holotransferrin binds to its two receptors (TfR1 and TfR2) which communicate with each other via iron-specific adaptor HFE and sensitize the BMP receptor to its ligands such as BMP6. Membrane-linked coreceptor hemojuvelin also potentiates the BMP receptor activation, which then controls hepcidin transcription via the SMADs. BMP signaling is also modulated by MT-2 protease, which cleaves hemojuvelin, and by neogenin, which may augment or stabilize membrane hemojuvelin. In hepatocytes, intracellular iron is also sensed, possibly through a mechanism that enhances the expression of BMP6 mRNA and protein, eventually leading to activation of the BMP receptor. Alternative ligands with BMP6-like activity must exist because mice that lack BMP6 still increase hepcidin mRNA in response to iron stores. Hepcidin transcription is prominently increased by inflammation, predominantly through the activity of IL-6, its receptor and its canonical JAK-STAT3 pathway.

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