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Hepcidin-Ferroportin Interaction Controls Systemic Iron Homeostasis

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22126493

Keywords

iron deficiency; iron overload; hemochromatosis; anemia; metal transport

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [R01 HD096863] Funding Source: Medline

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Iron regulation in organisms is primarily controlled by the interaction of the iron-regulatory peptide hormone hepcidin and its receptor ferroportin, which plays a crucial role in maintaining iron homeostasis. Dysregulation of hepcidin can lead to iron overload disorders or iron deficiency, affecting iron delivery and compensatory erythropoiesis.
Despite its abundance in the environment, iron is poorly bioavailable and subject to strict conservation and internal recycling by most organisms. In vertebrates, the stability of iron concentration in plasma and extracellular fluid, and the total body iron content are maintained by the interaction of the iron-regulatory peptide hormone hepcidin with its receptor and cellular iron exporter ferroportin (SLC40a1). Ferroportin exports iron from duodenal enterocytes that absorb dietary iron, from iron-recycling macrophages in the spleen and the liver, and from iron-storing hepatocytes. Hepcidin blocks iron export through ferroportin, causing hypoferremia. During iron deficiency or after hemorrhage, hepcidin decreases to allow iron delivery to plasma through ferroportin, thus promoting compensatory erythropoiesis. As a host defense mediator, hepcidin increases in response to infection and inflammation, blocking iron delivery through ferroportin to blood plasma, thus limiting iron availability to invading microbes. Genetic diseases that decrease hepcidin synthesis or disrupt hepcidin binding to ferroportin cause the iron overload disorder hereditary hemochromatosis. The opposite phenotype, iron restriction or iron deficiency, can result from genetic or inflammatory overproduction of hepcidin.

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