| Literature DB >> 34074010 |
George J Kontoghiorghes1, Annita Kolnagou1, Theodora Demetriou1, Marina Neocleous1, Christina N Kontoghiorghe1.
Abstract
The trimaltol iron complex (International Non-proprietary Name: ferric maltol) was originally designed, synthesised, and screened in vitro and in vivo in 1980-1981 by Kontoghiorghes G.J. following his discovery of the novel alpha-ketohydroxyheteroaromatic (KHP) class of iron chelators (1978-1981), which were intended for clinical use, including the treatment of iron deficiency anaemia (IDA). Iron deficiency anaemia is a global health problem affecting about one-third of the world's population. Many (and different) ferrous and ferric iron complex formulations are widely available and sold worldwide over the counter for the treatment of IDA. Almost all such complexes suffer from instability in the acidic environment of the stomach and competition from other dietary molecules or drugs. Natural and synthetic lipophilic KHP chelators, including maltol, have been shown in in vitro and in vivo studies to form stable iron complexes, to transfer iron across cell membranes, and to increase iron absorption in animals. Trimaltol iron, sold as Feraccru or Accrufer, was recently approved for clinical use in IDA patients in many countries, including the USA and in EU countries, and was shown to be effective and safe, with a better therapeutic index in comparison to other iron formulations. Similar properties of increased iron absorption were also shown by lipophilic iron complexes of 8-hydroxyquinoline, tropolone, 2-hydroxy-4-methoxypyridine-1-oxide, and related analogues. The interactions of the KHP iron complexes with natural chelators, drugs, metal ions, proteins, and other molecules appear to affect the pharmacological and metabolic effects of both iron and the KHP chelators. A new era in the treatment of IDA and other possible clinical applications, such as theranostic and anticancer formulations and metal radiotracers in diagnostic medicine, are envisaged from the introduction of maltol, KHP, and similar lipophilic chelators.Entities:
Keywords: Accrufer; Feraccru; alpha-ketohydroxyheteroaromatic chelators; clinical applications; ferric maltol; iron deficiency; iron deficiency anaemia; lipophilic chelators; maltol; pharmacology
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34074010 PMCID: PMC8197347 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Non-Regulatory Factors Affecting Iron Absorption.
Figure 1Mechanisms of iron absorption at the enterocyte. Animated image of the regulatory pathways involved in iron absorption. Iron metabolic pathways involving the apical divalent metal transported protein (DMT1), ferritin, hepcidin, ferroportin, and transferrin. A parallel, non-regulatory iron absorption pathway is also shown using lipophilic iron chelator complexes. In contrast to lipophilic chelators, hydrophilic chelators appear to inhibit iron absorption.
Figure 2The chemical structure of molecules involved in iron absorption. Haem iron (A) is present in meat products and is better absorbed than non-haem iron. Tannic acid (B) and phytic acid (E) inhibit non-haem iron absorption. Citric acid (C) and ascorbic acid (D) facilitate non-haem iron absorption. The chelating drugs deferiprone (F) and deferoxamine (G) inhibit iron absorption.
Examples of anaemias treated with iron supplements.
| Iron deficiency anaemia due to increased iron requirements |
| Iron deficiency anaemia due to insufficient dietary iron |
| Anaemia of chronic disease or anaemia of inflammation, in neoplastic, infectious and inflammatory diseases, mainly in cases with concurrent iron deficiency or in cases of combination with erythropoietin treatment (e.g., Inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, rheumatoid arthritis) |
| Chronic kidney disease including haemodialysis patients |
| Chronic cardiac failure |
Examples of iron complexes used for the treatment of iron deficiency anaemia.
Physicochemical properties of chelators and their iron complexes.
| Chelator | Log β | MWt | Kpar | Charge | Kpar Iron | Charge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maltol | 30 | 126 | 1.23 | neutral | 0.32 | neutral |
| Tropolone | 32 | 122 | 3.04 | neutral | 4.50 | neutral |
| 8-Hydroxyquinoline | 37 | 145 | 28.30 | neutral | 10.00 | neutral |
| L3 | 30 | 127 | 0.09 | zwitterionic | 0.04 | neutral |
| L4 | NA | 111 | 0.09 | zwitterionic | 0.95 | neutral |
| L6 | 29 | 155 | 0.37 | zwitterionic | 4.85 | neutral |
| Omadine | NA | 127 | 0.04 | zwitterionic | 2.67 | neutral |
| Mimosine | 36 | 198 | 0.01 | zwitterionic | 0.01 | zwitterionic |
| Deferoxamine | 31 | 561 | 0.02 | positive | 0.02 | positive |
| Deferiprone | 35 | 139 | 0.18 | neutral | 0.05 | neutral |
| Deferasirox | 27 | 373 | 6.30 | negative | NA | negative |
Iron complex stability constants (log β); molecular weight (MWt); n-octanol/water partition coefficients (Kpar); charge of chelator and chelator iron complex at physiological pH (charge); 2,4-dihydroxypyridine-1-oxide (L3); 2-hydroxypyridine-1-oxide (L4); 2-hydroxy-4-methoxypyridine-1-oxide (L6). Not available (NA).
Figure 3The formation of the tris-maltol iron (III) complex and maltol glucuronide. At physiological pH, maltol reacts with iron (III), forming the tris-maltol iron octahedral complex with iron in the centre. During iron (III) binding, a proton is displaced from the hydroxyl group of each maltol molecule, forming a negatively charged molecule, which coordinates with iron (III) of 3+ charge, forming a neutral trimaltol iron (III) complex. In humans, maltol is mostly metabolised to the maltol glucuronide conjugate, which has no iron or other metal chelating capacity.
Figure 4Characterisation of the maltol iron complex. (A) Stability of the maltol iron complex over a wide pH range. Titration of a mixture of maltol (0.75 mM) and iron (0.25 mM) at a pH range 2–12, indicating one iron complex species of red/orange colour at the pH 6–10 range. The optical density (OD) monitoring was carried out at the wavelengths of 320 nm (circles) and 280 nm (squares) [25]. (B) Identification of the stoichiometry of the tris-maltol iron complex at physiological pH. Estimation of the stoichiometry of the maltol iron complex using the Job’s plot method. Measurement of the optical density (OD) at 220 nm of different molar fraction mixtures of maltol (1 mM) and iron (1 mM) at pH 7.0. The horizontal axis refers to the molar fraction of maltol.
Figure 5The interaction of maltol with iron saturated transferrin. Optical density (OD) spectral changes of the reaction of maltol (1.0 mM) with diferric transferrin (Fe-T-Fe) (0.036 mM) as a function of time from 1–220 min [25].
Figure 6The transfer of iron by maltol in red blood cells. The rate of incorporation of the iron (59-Fe) in red blood cells was measured at different time intervals, following incubation with the iron (59-Fe) maltol complex at physiological pH. Three different experiments were carried out using different conditions including different buffers and variable maltol concentrations (0.5–4.0 mM) with molar excess ranging from 75 to 2800 times over iron [25].
Figure 7The effect of maltol on daily iron excretion in mice. The profile of iron (59-Fe) excretion in iron loaded, 59-Fe labelled mice following treatment with maltol (250–300 mg/kg). Maltol was administered in three mice initially intraperitoneally (ip) and after 3 days intragastrically (ig), as indicated by arrows. In each mouse, the mean iron (59-Fe) excretion 3–4 days prior to the recorded values was considered as the background (100%) excretion of (59-Fe) [25].