| Literature DB >> 23863711 |
Chanté L Richardson1, Lorrie L Delehanty, Grant C Bullock, Claudia M Rival, Kenneth S Tung, Donald L Kimpel, Sara Gardenghi, Stefano Rivella, Adam N Goldfarb.
Abstract
The unique sensitivity of early red cell progenitors to iron deprivation, known as the erythroid iron restriction response, serves as a basis for human anemias globally. This response impairs erythropoietin-driven erythropoiesis and underlies erythropoietic repression in iron deficiency anemia. Mechanistically, the erythroid iron restriction response results from inactivation of aconitase enzymes and can be suppressed by providing the aconitase product isocitrate. Recent studies have implicated the erythroid iron restriction response in anemia of chronic disease and inflammation (ACDI), offering new therapeutic avenues for a major clinical problem; however, inflammatory signals may also directly repress erythropoiesis in ACDI. Here, we show that suppression of the erythroid iron restriction response by isocitrate administration corrected anemia and erythropoietic defects in rats with ACDI. In vitro studies demonstrated that erythroid repression by inflammatory signaling is potently modulated by the erythroid iron restriction response in a kinase-dependent pathway involving induction of the erythroid-inhibitory transcription factor PU.1. These results reveal the integration of iron and inflammatory inputs in a therapeutically tractable erythropoietic regulatory circuit.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23863711 PMCID: PMC3726169 DOI: 10.1172/JCI68487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808