4.7 Review

Duodenal Cytochrome b (DCYTB) in Iron Metabolism: An Update on Function and Regulation

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 2274-2296

Publisher

MDPI AG
DOI: 10.3390/nu7042274

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cancer Institute New South Wales [10/ECF/2-18]
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia [1013810]
  3. Sydney Medical School Foundation
  4. University of Sydney
  5. NHMRC [1062607, 1060482, 1062026]
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1062026, 1060482, 1062607] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Iron and ascorbate are vital cellular constituents in mammalian systems. The bulk-requirement for iron is during erythropoiesis leading to the generation of hemoglobin-containing erythrocytes. Additionally, both iron and ascorbate are required as co-factors in numerous metabolic reactions. Iron homeostasis is controlled at the level of uptake, rather than excretion. Accumulating evidence strongly suggests that in addition to the known ability of dietary ascorbate to enhance non-heme iron absorption in the gut, ascorbate regulates iron homeostasis. The involvement of ascorbate in dietary iron absorption extends beyond the direct chemical reduction of non-heme iron by dietary ascorbate. Among other activities, intra-enterocyte ascorbate appears to be involved in the provision of electrons to a family of trans-membrane redox enzymes, namely those of the cytochrome b(561) class. These hemoproteins oxidize a pool of ascorbate on one side of the membrane in order to reduce an electron acceptor (e.g., non-heme iron) on the opposite side of the membrane. One member of this family, duodenal cytochrome b (DCYTB), may play an important role in ascorbate-dependent reduction of non-heme iron in the gut prior to uptake by ferrous-iron transporters. This review discusses the emerging relationship between cellular iron homeostasis, the emergent IRP1-HIF2 alpha axis, DCYTB and ascorbate in relation to iron metabolism.

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