| Literature DB >> 25202274 |
Esther G Meyron-Holtz1, Lyora A Cohen1, Lulu Fahoum1, Yael Haimovich1, Lena Lifshitz1, Inbar Magid-Gold1, Tanja Stuemler1, Marianna Truman-Rosentsvit1.
Abstract
Epithelial barriers are found in many tissues such as the intestine, kidney and brain where they separate the external environment from the body or a specific compartment from its periphery. Due to the tight junctions that connect epithelial barrier-cells (EBCs), the transport of compounds takes place nearly exclusively across the apical or basolateral membrane, the cell-body and the opposite membrane of the polarized EBC, and is regulated on numerous levels including barrier-specific adapted trafficking-machineries. Iron is an essential element but toxic at excess. Therefore, all iron-requiring organisms tightly regulate iron concentrations on systemic and cellular levels. In contrast to most cell types that control just their own iron homeostasis, EBCs also regulate homeostasis of the compartment they enclose or the body as a whole. Iron is transported across EBCs by specialized transporters such as the transferrin receptor and ferroportin. Recently, the iron storage protein ferritin was also attributed a role in the regulation of systemic iron homeostasis and we gathered evidence from the literature and original data that ferritin is polarized in EBC, suggesting also a role for ferritin in iron trafficking across EBCs.Entities:
Keywords: epithelial barriers; ferritin polarization; iron metabolism; iron transport; tight junctions
Year: 2014 PMID: 25202274 PMCID: PMC4142484 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2014.00194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Ferritin polarization. (A) Confocal microscopy images of Caco2 cells stained with anti L-subunit ferritin antibodies (green) and nuclei are stained with DAPI (blue). Ferritin levels were higher between the 8–12 μm sections showing the apical side of the cells. Optical section-size is indicated as distance from glass-bottom in red. Laser power, voltage and offset were identical between different sections for each fluorophore. (B) Quantification of ferritin-fluorescence in MSC-1 and Caco2 cells is expressed as percent of total fluorescence of the image area. Each confocal slice is numbered. Number 1 indicates the coverslip side. The percent area occupied by the ferritin signal in each Z slice was calculated from the sum of fluorescence in all stacks and plotted as a function of confocal slice. An increase of intensity is clearly detected on the basolateral side of the MSC-1 and the apical side of the Caco-2 cells.
FIGURE 2Iron transport across monolayer epithelial barriers and subcellular ferritin polarization. (A) Illustration of ferritin cellular polarization and iron reabsorption and trafficking across the epithelial barriers found in intestinal, renal, testicular, retinal and choroid plexus (CP) cells. Iron transporters are localized on the relevant membrane (N, nucleus; E, endosome; LE, late endosome; L, lysosome; P, phagosome; FPN, ferroportin; *represents suggested ferroportin localizations by the literature, arrows represent proposed direction of iron transport). (B) Intracellular ferritin polarization in epithelial barriers published in the literature. (1) In testinal villi paraffin sections stained with rabbit anti-ferritin H antibody (from Vanoaica et al., 2010) and reveal that ferritin is not evenly distributed throughout the cytosol, but appears in a punctate pattern that is more concentrated near the apical pole (arrows). (2) Kidney cortex sections stained with rabbit anti-ferritin H antibody (green). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue), (from Cohen et al., 2010) and reveals an uneven ferritin distribution in renal proximal tubule cells where ferritin was co-localized with villin (arrow) and was enriched near the apical pole of the PCT-cells. (3) Testis sections stained with rabbit anti-ferritin L antibody (red) and polyclonal GFP antibody (green), (from Leichtmann-Bardoogo et al., 2012), and reveals that ferritin is enriched in the SC cytosol close to the basolateral pole (white), especially around the early primary spermatocyte. (4) Retinal samples stained with rabbit anti-ferritin L antibody (red). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue; unpublished data, Joshua Dunaief, personal communication). This image reveals that ferritin is distributed in a polarized manner and was localized to the basal RPE (arrow) in a WT C57BL6/J retina. (5) Choroid plexus samples stained with anti-ferritin antibody (green), (from Rouault et al., 2009) shows expression of ferritin in 24-months old mouse-choroid plexus, but subcellular location cannot be determined. Permissions have been obtained for use of copyrighted material from all these sources.