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Nutritional Aspects of Iron in Health and Disease

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15112441

Keywords

iron deficiency; iron overload; anemia; heme; metabolic syndrome; cardiovascular disease; cancer; microbiome

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Dietary iron is crucial for health, but its absorption and metabolism are tightly regulated to prevent toxicity. Hepcidin deficiency causes hereditary hemochromatosis, an iron overload disorder. High intake of heme iron, found in meat products, is associated with metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular diseases, and cancers. Cohort studies provide epidemiological data, but further research is needed to establish causality and understand molecular mechanisms.
Dietary iron assimilation is critical for health and essential to prevent iron-deficient states and related comorbidities, such as anemia. The bioavailability of iron is generally low, while its absorption and metabolism are tightly controlled to satisfy metabolic needs and prevent toxicity of excessive iron accumulation. Iron entry into the bloodstream is limited by hepcidin, the iron regulatory hormone. Hepcidin deficiency due to loss-of-function mutations in upstream gene regulators causes hereditary hemochromatosis, an endocrine disorder of iron overload characterized by chronic hyperabsorption of dietary iron, with deleterious clinical complications if untreated. The impact of high dietary iron intake and elevated body iron stores in the general population is not well understood. Herein, we summarize epidemiological data suggesting that a high intake of heme iron, which is abundant in meat products, poses a risk factor for metabolic syndrome pathologies, cardiovascular diseases, and some cancers. We discuss the clinical relevance and potential limitations of data from cohort studies, as well as the need to establish causality and elucidate molecular mechanisms.

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