| Literature DB >> 29237594 |
Sharraya Aschemeyer1,2, Bo Qiao2, Deborah Stefanova3, Erika V Valore2, Albert C Sek3, T Alex Ruwe4, Kyle R Vieth4, Grace Jung2, Carla Casu5, Stefano Rivella5, Mika Jormakka6,7, Bryan Mackenzie4, Tomas Ganz1,2,8, Elizabeta Nemeth2.
Abstract
Nonclassical ferroportin disease (FD) is a form of hereditary hemochromatosis caused by mutations in the iron transporter ferroportin (Fpn), resulting in parenchymal iron overload. Fpn is regulated by the hormone hepcidin, which induces Fpn endocytosis and cellular iron retention. We characterized 11 clinically relevant and 5 nonclinical Fpn mutations using stably transfected, inducible isogenic cell lines. All clinical mutants were functionally resistant to hepcidin as a consequence of either impaired hepcidin binding or impaired hepcidin-dependent ubiquitination despite intact hepcidin binding. Mapping the residues onto 2 computational models of the human Fpn structure indicated that (1) mutations that caused ubiquitination-resistance were positioned at helix-helix interfaces, likely preventing the hepcidin-induced conformational change, (2) hepcidin binding occurred within the central cavity of Fpn, (3) hepcidin interacted with up to 4 helices, and (4) hepcidin binding should occlude Fpn and interfere with iron export independently of endocytosis. We experimentally confirmed hepcidin-mediated occlusion of Fpn in the absence of endocytosis in multiple cellular systems: HEK293 cells expressing an endocytosis-defective Fpn mutant (K8R), Xenopus oocytes expressing wild-type or K8R Fpn, and mature human red blood cells. We conclude that nonclassical FD is caused by Fpn mutations that decrease hepcidin binding or hinder conformational changes required for ubiquitination and endocytosis of Fpn. The newly documented ability of hepcidin and its agonists to occlude iron transport may facilitate the development of broadly effective treatments for hereditary iron overload disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29237594 PMCID: PMC5824336 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-05-786590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113